#Egypt #Syria #Palestine #Refugees Refugees Solidarity Movement - TopicsExpress



          

#Egypt #Syria #Palestine #Refugees Refugees Solidarity Movement حركة التضامن مع اللاجئين When Syrian refugees began arriving two years ago, they were welcomed into Egyptians’ homes, offered empty apartments, cash assistance, and whatever else people could spare. Now, stories of strife abound. A Syrian restaurant called Sheikh el Kar was burned to the ground, and many Syrian-owned shops were vandalized and broken into. Last month two seven-year old Egyptian boys from Damietta splashed gas on the leg of an eight-year-old Syrian boy, and lit him on fire. Another 19-year-old refugee from Damascus told me he was attacked on the street and had a rope hung around his neck. Many Syrian refugees have been fired from their jobs, according to Nesreen Faqousa, the Executive Director of Resala, an organization that supports Syrians in Damietta in partnership with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). “The owners say I don’t need Syrians here,” says Suzan Wardeh, who works with an NGO called Tadamon. Now, “they’re asking about the legal documents for work which…[were] not required before.” Farqousa fears that unemployment among Syrians in Egypt will only increase, and that the aid from international organizations, no longer supplemented by donations from Egyptians, is insufficient to cover the needs of the population. What’s happening in Damietta is happening to hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees across Egypt. Syrians, along with Palestinians and other foreigners have been the targets of xenophobia and virulent Egyptian nationalism since Morsi’s ouster and the crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood. Having fled one hostile and unstable environment, they now find themselves in another. Between aggression from the local population, and increased bureaucratic obstacles and harassment by the state, many Syrians have chosen to leave Egypt, and many more will follow, often heading for even more precarious lives elsewhere. newrepublic/article/115017/syrian-refugees-egypt-unluckiest-people-earth
Posted on: Mon, 07 Oct 2013 21:17:12 +0000

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