The Syrian Observatory For Human Rights

More People Try to Immigrate from Govt-Held Regions in Syria

 

The fourth Syrian-Russian Joint Meeting kicked off in Damascus on Tuesday with the aim of returning Syrian refugees back to their country.

 

The meeting took place as more and more Syrians living in regime-held regions are seeking to immigrate instead of remaining in their homeland.

As it toured Damascus in recent weeks, Asharq Al-Awsat learned that thoughts of immigration were what preoccupied the people the most, especially the youth.

 

A woman in her 40s revealed that she has for a month been visiting real estate firm after real estate firm to sell her house.

 

She told Asharq Al-Awsat that she wanted to secure enough money for her only son to travel to Europe and “save himself from the tragedy we are living.”

 

She was met with poor offers to sell her home with firms seeking to exploit her desperation.

 

Despite this, she vowed to sell her house and all her belongings to ensure that her son immigrates.

 

“Why should we stay here? To eat a single meal a day? Run around to secure a loaf of bread or a gas canister? I will make sure he leaves and I will follow him, no matter the cost,” she said.

 

At a shoe store in Damascus, a youth said his salary of 300,000 pounds (1 dollar is equal to around 4,000 pounds) was not enough to support him.

 

“I am unmarried. What would it be like if I were?” he wondered. “Where would I get money to pay for rent? How would I buy furniture? The future is bleak. There is no future for us here.”

 

The solution lies in immigration, he added. “Living in the worst countries is better than living here.”

 

He revealed that he was in contact with relatives and friends in Egypt to help him immigrate there.

 

Sources revealed that the cost of immigration to Egypt ranges between 1,500 and 2,000 dollars, while the cost jumps to 15,000 to 20,000 if one were to take the smuggling route to Europe.

 

The fourth Syrian-Russian Joint Meeting aims to follow up on the International Conference on Return of Syrian Refugees and Displaced.

 

Damascus and Moscow estimated that 2.326 million Syrians, including the internally displaced, had returned to their homes. Observers have however, dismissed the figure as inaccurate.

 

One observer, speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat on condition of anonymity, said: “Those refugees aren’t crazy. They wouldn’t return home.”

 

“Why would they come back? What do they have here that would prompt them to return?” he asked.

 

Another observer said Damascus and Moscow were trying to make it seem that Syria is safe for the refugees to return so that this file will be dropped or forgotten by the international community and United Nations.

 

They noted how the regime had used the same tactic when it announced a presidential amnesty earlier this year.

 

The pardon was hailed by UN envoy Geir Pedersen, even though only 1,200 people were released, while the fate of over 125,000 detainees remains unknown.

 

 

 

 

 

Source:Asharq Al-Awsat

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of the Observatory.