Lebanon at 'breaking point' with refugee influx: PM

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Lebanon at breaking point with refugee influx: PM
Syrian refugees fill containers with water at a makeshift settlement in the Bekaa valley's town of Bar Elias in Lebanon. - AFP

Beirut - The prime minister said he would appeal at the conference for international investment to improve infrastructure.

By AFP

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Published: Sun 2 Apr 2017, 12:20 PM

Last updated: Sun 2 Apr 2017, 2:23 PM

Lebanon's prime minister warned on Friday that his country has reached "breaking point" by hosting more than one million Syrian refugees and urged investment from the international community.
Saad Hariri's comments came as the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR said more than six million Syrians have fled their country since its devastating war broke out in 2011.
Of those, Lebanon is hosting more than a million Syrians, roughly a quarter of its current population of four million.
"This issue has reached a breaking point for us in Lebanon.. We want the international community to hear us and understand that Lebanon is facing a crisis," Hariri told foreign media in Beirut. He was speaking ahead of an international conference on the post-conflict future of Syria that the European Union and United Nations are to host in Brussels on April 5.
The prime minister said he would appeal at the conference for international investment to improve infrastructure, including schools, roads, the environment and security in Lebanon.
He would propose the international community "commits... 10,000 to 12,000 (US) dollars per refugee (in Lebanon) over five to seven years".
Hariri told reporters he also fears that the refugee crisis could implode on the social level because of "huge tensions" between Lebanese and Syrians in most host communities. "I fear civil unrest," he said.
The influx of Syrian refugees in Lebanon has stretched the country's economic resources, the billionaire premier said.
In the education system, classrooms were overcrowded with the number of students more than doubling in six years to accommodate Syrian pupils. Unlike Palestinian refugees who live in camps managed by the United Nations, Syrian refugees in Lebanon live in informal camps.


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