World

Frozen empathy: Storm sweeps Syrian refugee camps in Lebanon

January 12, 2019
Arsal Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon fully covered with snow following Storm Norma. — Courtesy photo
Arsal Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon fully covered with snow following Storm Norma. — Courtesy photo

By Leen Alfaisal

BEIRUT —
“What’s more frozen, refugee camps or humanity?” That is the recurring question you find being asked in the past week on social media under the hashtag of “Arsal Tastagheeth” (Arsal cries out for help).

The Lebanese mountainous border town of Arsal was covered with snow following Storm Norma, leaving Syrian refugee camps in unimaginably horrible conditions. With temperatures between -4 to -8 degree Celsius, refugees’ tents in the Beqaa area were either flooded with water, or destroyed by snow.

According to the UN refugee agency, 151 sites that are home to some 11,000 Syrians have been heavily affected.

Syrian activist Fatima Alhaji explained to Al Arabiya English that there are two kinds of disasters caused by Storm Norma in the Syrian refugee camps. The first, she says, hit the northern Beqaa area of Arsal, where snow was merciless, and the second hit central and eastern parts of Beqaa where the refugee camps flooded with water.

Fatima estimates the number of families that still haven’t received oil aid for their heaters to be around 2,000.

Al Arabiya’s correspondent visited one of the rather frozen camps and described the conditions as “unbearable” while broadcasting his coverage right next to a 2-year-old girl standing in slippers on the snow.

Around eight winters ago, Alaa-eddin Teren, might have complained once or twice about the government rationing water, but he would have never guessed that he would ever complain about having too much water in his house— or tent to be more accurate.

The harshly cold winters in Lebanon’s Syrian refugee camps is not new for Alaa and his neighbors, but when storm Norma hit them it was like being displaced all over again.

The father of four chose not to leave his tent.

“I use wood to keep my family warm. We don’t always have oil, but when we do, we keep it for the coldest nights. Only if I’m almost literally freezing, I light up the heater,” Alaa told Al Arabiya English.

The water was at knee height, but Alaa and his family wouldn’t leave their camp to join others in the very few centers welcoming refugees.

“Other men sent their families to the centers and stayed in the camp to watch their belongings, but thank god our tent’s condition isn’t as bad as theirs. We wouldn’t want to take up space in the centers when there are others who are suffering bigger losses.”

Alaa’s camp is surrounded by farming trenches that are filling up with water and might pour into the camp when its full.

“We’re terrified of the possibility that the very little stability we had built up here would just vanish in a matter of hours. And no one is doing anything to minimize that possibility,” he helplessly said, “we just want them to pump the water from the sewage system in our tents, that is all.” — Al Arabiya English


January 12, 2019
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