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AFP

Syrian refugees in Jordan camp say they have nothing to go home to

They have lived for years in Zaatari, the world’s biggest refugee camp for Syrians, but many are unsure they want to return home from Jordan even after the ouster of former president Bashar al-Assad.

They fear the security situation might once again deteriorate after 13 years of civil war, and some say their homes have been destroyed while others lost their jobs and feel they have nothing to go back to. In 2012, a year into the war in Syria, neighbouring Jordan opened Zaatari camp to host people fleeing the conflict.

It is now home to 75,000 people, according to UN figures. To begin with, it was a squalid collection of tents dotting an arid landscape, but over time, it grew into a town of prefabricated homes, supplied with free electricity, water, health and schools.

On a street named the Champs-Elysees, after the famed Parisian avenue, 60-year-old shop owner Yousef Hariri told AFP he wanted to stay in Zaatari with his family, where they feel safe. “I can’t go back. That would mean losing everything and selling the shop would be hard,” said Hariri, whose store sells construction materials. “The situation in Syria is not good at the moment and it is not clear what will happen. Prices are through the roof and there are armed rebels. Our houses are destroyed.”

The war in Syria, which began with Assad’s crackdown on democracy protests in 2011, forced millions of people to flee the country, with most of them seeking refuge in neighbouring countries.

Tens of thousands have returned since an Islamist-led coalition ousted Assad on December 8, but most refugees have yet to make the journey home. Most of the refugees in Zaatari came from the south Syrian province of Daraa, near the Jordanian border.

It was, earlier in the conflict, home to 140,000 people. Refugees in the camp receive cash assistance for food, and they have the right to work outside the camp.

“Where are we going to go back to?” said Khaled al-Zoabi, 72, who has lived in the camp since 2012, and who cited the destruction wrought by the war. “The refugees’ finances aren’t good enough for anyone to return, and no one knows what will happen in Syria,” he said. “We fled the injustice and tyranny of Assad’s gangs in Syria, where human life had no value. Here, I feel I am a human being, and I prefer to stay,” said the shop owner. To date, there is no financial assistance to help people return. Radwan al-Hariri, a 54-year-old father of three, said his contacts in Syria had all advised him to stay put.

An imam at a mosque, the grandfather of 12 children all born in Zaatari said that in Syria, “no one helps you and there is no work”. According to the Jordanian authorities, 52,000 Syrians have returned home through the Jaber border crossing between the two countries since Assad’s overthrow. “Insecurity remains a concern. There is still a lot of instability, armed clashes in some parts of the country and an increasing number of civilian casualties due to remnants of war and unexploded ordnance,” UN High Commissioner for Refugees spokesperson in Jordan Roland Schoenbauer told AFP.

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