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Persecution faced by Palestinian refugees
in Lebanon
After
60 years of exile, Palestinians living in Lebanon continue to be explicitly
and systematically deprived of their civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights and liberties.
Right of Return
Palestinians were forced to flee or were expelled from their homes and
lands at the time of the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948
and again when Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967. Many
of them took refuge in Lebanon, where they remain today, together with
their descendents. There are today about 400,000 Palestinian refugees
in Lebanon and the majority of them live in refugee camps run by the United
Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East
(UNRWA).
The
Palestinians' right to return is clearly recognized and upheld in international
law. However, over 50 years have already elapsed since the start of the
Palestinian refugee problem and the right to return has yet to be realized.
[2]
For
the past 60 years, Palestinian refugees in Lebanon continue to live in
horrific conditions inside refugee camps. Their right to return to the
homes they fled in 1948 continues to be completely denied by Israel, in
direct violation of the following international legal instruments:
·
UN
General Assembly Resolution 194, re-affirmed over 110 times by the United
Nations General Assembly since 1948;
·
UN
General Assembly Resolution 3236 and 52/62;
·
The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
·
The
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights;
·
The
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,
and;
·
The
4th Geneva Convention.
The
denial of this individual and inalienable right has led stateless Palestinian
refugees into a life of misery in refugee camps throughout neighboring
host countries.
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Violations
of International Human Rights Conventions
The treatment of Palestinian refugees in Lebanon has been recognized to
constitute a violation of a plethora of basic human rights. Amnesty International reported in 2003 that the Lebanese treatment of stateless
Palestinians is in violation of:
·
The International Covenant
on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights;
·
The International Covenant
on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination;
·
The Convention on the Rights
of the Child;
·
The International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights;
·
The Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, and;
·
The Convention Against Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.
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Systematic Discrimination
- Palestinians
in Lebanon
face systematic discrimination that jeopardizes their capacity to attain
the essentials of a safe and healthy existence. Amnesty International
has made the following unequivocal observations:
Discrimination levied
against Palestinians in relation to the rights to own and inherit property
and the right to work, creates conditions where Palestinians refugees
cannot enjoy an adequate standard of living. […] The conditions that Palestinian
refugees live in, including their lack of access to adequate housing,
food and clothing, lead to a situation where Palestinian refugees do not
enjoy the right to an adequate standard of living.
- Jordan,
Lebanon, and Syria have the largest Palestinian refugee populations.
Those in Lebanon probably suffer the most out of these three communities.
For them, the pain associated with the loss of their homes, the decades
of exile in foreign countries is aggravated by a policy of systematic
discrimination against them.
- Lebanon
is a country with a small population and very diverse ethnic and religious
communities. It has suffered through a long civil war and severe sectarian
tensions, to which the Palestinians were inextricably linked. The involvement
of Palestinian factions in the civil war is cited as one of the main
reasons why Palestinians are the victims of discrimination in Lebanon.
This does not excuse the systematic discrimination against them or the
violation of their fundamental human rights.
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Right to Employment
& Abject Poverty
- Palestinians in
Lebanon are de jure and de facto discriminated against
in relation to other non-citizens with regards to the right to work
and the right to social security.
- The
Lebanese government applies a policy of reciprocity of treatment when
it comes to granting work permits; it will grant the right to work to
foreign nationals to the extent that their state grants the right to
Lebanese nationals. Palestinians are at a particular disadvantage in
relation to other foreign nationals as they do not have a state that
could provide reciprocal treatment to Lebanese nationals.
- Palestinians face severe restrictions in their access to work
and to opportunities to gain their living by work.
Palestinian refugees are barred de jure from
practicing several professions such as law, medicine, pharmacy, and
journalism due to a requirement of possessing Lebanese citizenship or
to having reciprocal treatment in the country of the foreign national
wishing to practice this profession.
- A Ministerial Decree issued on 15 December 1995 lists trades
and vocations that are restricted to Lebanese nationals; this includes
a non-exhaustive listing of dozens of trades and vocations restricted
to Lebanese employees or employers.
- Lebanese
laws (resolution 621/1, decree 6812 of 1995, and decree 17561 of 1964)
clearly restrict foreigners from working in over 70 professions
in Lebanon. Only 1% of the Palestinians in Lebanon manage to secure
the mandatory work permit required by the Lebanese government, in order
to benefit from regular jobs.
- The
majority of Palestinians are forced to work illegally, and in unskilled
labor, mostly in manual, irregular and daily – either paid, or in petty
commerce in the camps. The average individual income (44$) is a quarter
of the Lebanese minimum wage (161$).
- UNRWA
has estimated that 60% of Palestinians in Lebanon live below the poverty
line. Other studies have indicated that proportions have risen
to 80%, with 56% living in extreme poverty.
- Very
few Palestinians received work permits, and those who found work usually
were directed into unskilled occupations. Palestinian incomes continued
to decline. The law prohibits Palestinian refugees
from working in 72 professions.
-
According to UNRWA, the hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees
in Lebanon have the highest rate of people living in "abject poverty"
of all the Palestinian refugee communities they serve.
- The
Popular Committee, an administrative committee representing different
political factions in the 'Ayn al-Hilwah’ camp, Lebanon's largest Palestinian
refugee camp, says that the rate of unemployment is 80%. It mainly attributes
this to laws discriminating against Palestinian refugees in their ability
to seek work.
Top
Right to Adequate Housing
& Property
·
Palestinians
in Lebanon are
de jure and de facto discriminated against as compared with
other non-citizens with regards to the rights to own and inherit property.
·
Palestinians
in Lebanon are restricted
from rebuilding or redeveloping refugee camps due to government-imposed
restrictions.
·
Recent passing by Parliament
of revisions to the law concerning ownership of property by foreigners,
a new level of exclusion has been reached by forbidding "anyone who
does not have citizenship in a recognized state" from owning property.
Though not named explicitly, Palestinians are clearly meant by this roundabout
phrasing. Those Palestinians who already own property, moreover, will
not be able to pass on their homes to their children.
·
Palestinian refugees do not
have the right to own property in the country. Palestinians no longer
may purchase property and those who owned property prior to 2001 will
be prohibited from passing it on to their children.
·
The
law does not explicitly target Palestinian refugees,
but bars those who are not "bearer[s] of nationality of a recognized
state" from owning property; in practice, this means only the Palestinians.
·
The
number of Palestinians in Lebanon has tripled due to demographic growth
and Palestinians returning from the Gulf States (especially Kuwait, during
the Gulf War). Because of unemployment and restricted access to
work, most Palestinians have no choice but to live in concentrated areas
such as the refugee camps.
·
No
new camps have been allowed since the war of 1975/76 when three camps
in Lebanese Forces-dominated areas were overrun; existing camp boundaries
are non-expandable; building inside
most camps is restricted; and repairs as well as building new structures
have been forbidden in all the Southern camps since 1991.
· Most
Palestinian refugees lived in overpopulated camps that suffered repeated
heavy damage as a result of fighting during the civil war, during the
Israeli invasion of the country, and during on-going camp feuds. The Government
generally prohibited the construction of permanent structures in the camps
on the grounds that such construction encouraged the notion of permanent
refugee settlement in the country.
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“Khaled Abu Hamid, a seventeen-year-old youth suffered a bullet
injury in his lower extremity when he was standing on the mounds
that surround Buss camp (Tyre Area) on 1st of July 2002. Fire
was opened on him by Lebanese security that were in "hot
pursuit" of some Palestinian Refugee youth trying to "smuggle"
some building material on a motorcycle into the Buss camp. A motorcycle
load of building material becomes a target for security men and
its driver becomes a smuggler prone either to legal action (including
being sued in military courts) or -worse still- to becoming a
target to official firearms if he tries to evade the Lebanese
checkpoints.”
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·
Camp space is insufficient,
and environmental conditions – lack of electricity, over-crowding, polluted
water, sewage-seepage – are hazardous to the health of its inhabitants.
·
Public construction schemes
threaten several camps with complete or partial demolition.
·
The department for Palestinian
Affairs in Lebanon acknowledges that some 200,000 Palestinian refugees
live in camps that are capable of holding up to 50,000.
Top
Freedom of Expression
& Political Rights
- Freedom
of expression is conditioned on the presence of Lebanese security forces
and the Syrian army, who control exits and entrances of most camps.
Many Palestinians have been arrested and transferred to either prisons
in Lebanon or Syria.
- For
fear of reprisals, Palestinians are afraid to express their opinions,
not only due to the controls of Syrian and Lebanese security, but also
due to the different rivaling political factions within the same camps.
- Palestinian
refugees have no political rights. An estimated 17 Palestinian factions
operate in Lebanon, generally organized around prominent individuals.
Most Palestinians live in refugee camps controlled by one or more factions.
The leaders of the refugees are not elected, nor are there any democratically
organized institutions in the camps.
- Palestinian
refugees were subject to arrest, detention, and harassment by state
security forces, Syrian forces, and rival Palestinians. For example,
Palestinian refugees living in camps are not allowed to bring in construction
material to repair damaged houses. Lebanese security services use this
as leverage to recruit informers and buy their allegiance.
- Palestinian
groups in refugee camps maintain a separate, arbitrary system of justice
for other Palestinians. Members
of the various Palestinian groups that control the camps tortured and
detained their Palestinian rivals.
- In
the Palestinian camp of Ayn al Hilweh assassination of opponents
is more common than their arrest.
- Many
armed political factions compete for control of the camps and factional
fighting is a common feature of life in some of the camps.
Top
Freedom of Association
- Under
Lebanese law, all associations and NGOs must be registered by Lebanese
Citizens, thus, Palestinians are not permitted to organize and form
associations, unless through a Lebanese citizen.
- Where
authorities discover that the associations are not Lebanese, they are
forced to cease activities.
Freedom
of Movement
- Those
waiting to go in and out of the camps may be subject to identity
checks by the Lebanese or Syrian army.
- On
22nd September, 1995, the Lebanese authorities forbade Palestinians
(mainly working in Gulf States) outside Lebanon to re-enter without
a re-entry visa; at the same time their embassy would not issue any
new travel documents, without pre-authorization of the Ministry of the
Interior. Because of these restrictions many Palestinians working
in the Gulf States who were expelled by these countries after the Gulf
War were unable to return to either country. Many others did not
want to risk leaving Lebanon, for fear of not being permitted re-entry
to see their families.
- In
1999 the Lebanese government cancelled the requirement for entry/exit
visas. However, as the majority of Palestinians were affected
after the Gulf War, they were compelled to seek asylum elsewhere.
- Palestinians
are forbidden from living in the areas near the frontiers, where they
can only go with prior authorization.
- Some
of the Palestinian refugee camps in the south of Lebanon might easily
be mistaken for military zones. The camps are isolated from the outside
world by fences and are guarded by Lebanese soldiers that control and
vet access to and exit from the camps.
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Right to Education
- Although
Palestinians are entitled to the same education as Lebanese, when Lebanese
schools and universities enroll their students, they give priority to
Lebanese candidates. Moreover, private education is unaffordable
to most Palestinians. According to the Department of Palestinian
Affairs, around 20% of the Palestinian refugees have had access to Lebanese
education.
- UNRWA
provides education in 75 schools (70 primary and 5 secondary).
UNRWA education is free, and attended by approximately 39000 students.
42% of UNRWA schools in Lebanon were built in the 1950s and 1960s, and
today are in a state of disrepair. Moreover, the number of schools
does not match the growing population, resulting in a system of double
shifts, where classes are taught to one group in the morning and another
in the afternoon. In each small classroom there are around 40
students.
- Because
of overcrowding, students graduate from elementary school automatically,
to free up space for new students. Failure rates are around 40-50%,
which also reflects the poor teaching they receive, due to the fact
that salaries for teachers are extremely poor, while hours are long.
- Because
living conditions are so poor, many young people give up school to work
illegally, in order to secure income for their families. Others
use drugs, crime or join politico-religious factions to gain income.
- Palestinian
children reportedly were forced to leave school at an early age to help
earn income. The U.N. estimated that 18 percent of street children in
the country were Palestinian.
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Right to Healthcare
- In
Lebanon, public hospitals are largely insufficient, and the majority
of the population relies on private hospitals, which cost too much for
most Palestinians. UNRWA provides medical services in 24 private
general hospitals, and one maternity and child care center. Basic
services are offered only in the areas of maternity, child care, family
planning and control of infectious and non-infectious disease.
- Due
to high levels of demand, UNRWA doctors have had to see from 150-200
patients per day, and therefore cannot provide quality services.
- UNRWA
is barely able to meet the basic needs of the Palestinian population;
partial reimbursement (25% of the cost of hospital treatment) is one
of the coping mechanisms, which has resulted in cases of Palestinians
who have not been able to leave hospitals because they cannot pay the
costs of their stay.
- Due
to increasing populations and decreasing funds, UNRWA has had to restrict
its services, included suspending subsidies for certain emergency treatments
and medical staff, and reducing medical equipment and maintenance.
Top
Right to Social Security
- Palestinians
in Lebanon
are de jure and de facto discriminated against in relation
to other non-citizens with regards to the right to work and the right
to social security;
- The
Lebanese law on social security (26/09/63) relating to foreigners, states
that only foreigners who hold a work permit and are from a State which
applies the principal of reciprocity may claim social security.
As a result, Palestinian workers are excluded, even when they have a
work permit, as they cannot meet the principal of reciprocity criteria
because they are Stateless.
Lack
of UNRWA funding
- United
Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), Amnesty International and the
Palestinian Human Rights Organization have recognized that, as a result
of this systematic discrimination, Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon are
almost entirely dependent on UNRWA for basic services.
- UNRWA
is, however, unable to provide these services, due to budget constraints.
In their 2003 report to the UN General Assembly, UNRWA describes the
situation succinctly:
209.
Demand for food aid and cash for food assistance
continued to rise as legal restrictions on employment of Palestine refugees
in Lebanon remained in force and prevailing socio-economic conditions
limited income-earning opportunities for refugees.
- Since
1994, UNRWA has been facing serious budget shortages which have affected
the quality and scope of the services it renders.
Top
Statelessness:
No United Nations Protection or any other form
of protection
- Palestinian
Refugees are the only refugees in the world to exist solely under
the mandate of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and
therefore outside the realm of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) in their host countries. The consequence of
this fact is one many do not comprehend. The Palestinian
Refugees become sidelined and marginalized, without hope for any form
of protection.
- For
over 50 years, [Palestinian refugees]
have been excluded from the international system for the protection
of refugees.
[51]
- The
lack of adequate assistance is only one of the failures of the international
community towards Palestinian refugees living in UNRWA's area of operation.
Unlike other refugees, they are not protected by the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees or the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR). Both the 1951 Convention and the Statute of UNHCR
exclude Palestinian refugees from international protection.
Ironically,
like the Lebanese law barring [Palestinian refugees] from owning property
in Lebanon, the Convention and the Statute do not explicitly exclude
Palestinian refugees; rather, they exclude anyone who receives assistance
from other organs of the United Nations. Here again, Palestinian refugees
find themselves singled out.
- Thus,
because of their unique situation, Palestinian refugees
in Lebanon have been denied virtually every available means of securing
their basic rights:
The
exceptional condition of Palestinian statelessness and Palestinian dispersal
extends itself to all political, economic, social and humanitarian spheres.
UNRWA's mandate does not provide protection for Palestinian refugees nor
can they appeal to the assistance of UNHCR whose mandate specifically
exempts them from its protection. This aberration is particularly significant,
not only for refugees living under Israeli occupation in the West Bank
and Gaza, but also for those Palestinian refugees who are temporary residents
in various countries, mainly Lebanon, Syria and Jordan (1). Thus, UNRWA's
operations in these countries, the refugees' legal status and their rights
are subject to host government policies without recourse to international
agreements delineating refugee rights.
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No
Improvement in Sight
- Harsh
discriminatory practices by the Lebanese government and the incapacity
of lack of UNRWA to fulfill its mandate have driven Palestinian refugees
into a situation characterized by abject poverty, isolation, and persecution.
- This
deplorable situation is also highly unlikely to improve in the foreseeable
future. Sherifa Sherfie noted that as recently as…
…the
18th of April 2003, during the meeting of the newly formed Lebanese cabinet,
President Lahoud stressed that Lebanon will not back down on its insistence
that Israel complies with the right of return of the Palestinian refugees,
and that it (Lebanon) rejects any plans for their resettlement in Lebanon
(tawteen)…At present, any resettlement (tawteen) of Palestinian refugees
is forbidden by the Lebanese Constitution.
This
attitude is reflective of the official Lebanese government position that
Lebanon cannot and therefore will not accommodate Palestinian refugees.
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Camp
2008
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2007
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Camp
2006 |
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