Nearly 22,000 Syrian
refugees had fled the crackdown in their country to Lebanon according to a report
issued on Saturday by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
According to the report
“the UNHCR and its NGO partners are working in cooperation with the (Lebanese)
government, local authorities, and international agencies to aid more than
22,000 Syrian refugees across the country.”
The statement said that
around 9,940 people have been registered in the north and the procedures are
still ongoing to register the rest as there are around 3,000 people in Tripoli waiting to be
officially registered.
“There are more than
9,000 people stationed in (the Lebanese northern region of) Wadi Khaled and Tripoli , in addition to
around 8,500 people in the Bekaa area,” the UNHCR said.
The report noted that
U.N. Special Coordinator for Lebanon Derek Plumbly’s visited Akkar on Tuesday
and met with a number of the Syrian refugees.
Plumbly, also held talks
with local authorities and the U.N. agencies working in the Area to “inquire
about the humanitarian conditions of the refugees.”
The UNHCR appealed in
March for $84 million to support Syrian refugees, saying contingency plans for
looking after 100,000 abroad were under way.
Monitors say more than
200 people have been killed in Syria
since hostilities were officially suspended on April 12.
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