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Guterres Calls for more Action to ‘Match Generosity’ of Syria Neighboring Countries | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks during a news conference in Istanbul, Turkey. Reuters


Azraq camp (Jordan), Cairo- U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres called on Wednesday for more cooperation among different members of the international community “to match the generosity of the neighboring countries of Syria” despite frustration among Syrian refugees who said they expect nothing of peace talks.

“It is clear for me that refugee protection is not only the responsibility of neighbors, it is the responsibility of all the international community,” Guterres said during a press conference with Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry in Cairo.

“I believe that it would be important to substantially increase the number of refugees that are resettled into Europe and other parts of the world in order to show effective solidarity with the countries of first asylum,” he added.

His comments came amid pessimism expressed by Syrian refugees.

“I don’t think anything will come of the talks” this week in Kazakhstan and the next in Switzerland, says Ahmad al-Khabouri, 32, at a refugee camp in Jordan.

But the young man, who fled Syria with his wife and children in 2014, says he still clings on to hope of returning home some day.

“I don’t know if my house has been destroyed or not, but I want to return home even if we’ve managed to make a new life for ourselves here,” he says.

In the Azraq refugee camp, Khabouri runs a small shop that sells shisha tobacco and bicycles, the only method of transport for around 54,000 residents in the settlement.

The U.N. refugee agency says Jordan has taken in 655,000 Syrians since the start of the conflict, but Amman says the number is much higher at 1.4 million.

Sitting beside him outside his shop, Khabouri’s 65-year-old uncle says he still thinks about his home and surrounding fields in Daraa.

At a nearby electronics stall, Ali al-Ghouthani, 42, says he’ll return to Syria as soon as it is safe.

“Despite the dignified life we have here, I’ll go back as soon as security returns — even if my home is destroyed… I’ll rebuild it,” says the father-of-eight, who is also from Daraa.

Beside him, Abdelmonem al-Muthib listens to the chirping of a caged bird brought from Syria. But he says Syria will have to be much safer for him to return.

“I won’t start again from scratch, even if the fighting stops… unless the situation looks at least 35 percent like it did before the war,” says the father-of-six. “If not, I’ll stay here.”

In Lebanon, where the UNHCR says it has registered more than one million Syrian refugees, camp residents express similar frustration at the stagnant peace process.

“We’re not expecting anything. They’ve already met five or six times without any results,” says Tarek Salloum, 24, standing outside a makeshift home in a camp in east Lebanon.

“There’ll be no solution because no one wants to make any concessions,” says the refugee, who fled to the Marj area from the Syrian town of Zabadani across the border.

“The losers are the Syrians who left their country.”

Qasiya Ezz, who has 10 children, says all she wants from the talks is “security and a small house for me and my children”.

“Whether the regime falls or not, I don’t care,” says the 38-year-old. “We used to have peace in our beautiful country. All I want is to go home.”