1. Introduction
1. The Syrian refugee crisis is
a consequence of the ongoing war in Syria. This conflict has its
origins in the popular demonstrations of March 2011 against the
government of Bashar al-Assad. The government’s violent response
and external actors’ military and financial aid to opposition groups
caused a rapid escalation into armed conflict. Regional powers including
Turkey, Iran and Saudi Arabia interfered in the conflict as it spread and
intensified, becoming a “proxy war” between outside powers. The
conflict has also taken on a seemingly sectarian nature, with various
Islamist forces fighting against the Assad government, most prominent
amongst them the terrorist Sunni group “IS” and the al-Nusra Front,
and Lebanese Hezbollah and other Iranian-backed Shi'ite groups fighting
alongside government forces. International powers, including the
United States, France, the United Kingdom and Russia, are also involved
in varying ways. According to the United Nations, by the summer
of 2015, more than 250 000 people had been killed and 1.2 million
injured; others estimate that up to 500 000 people have been killed.
The growing complexity of the conflict, coupled with the increasing
military involvement of external actors, has made the prospects
for peace ever more remote, as shown by the failure of successive
rounds of UN-sponsored peace initiatives.
2. Refugees began fleeing Syria early on in the conflict, although
initially in relatively small numbers. At the end of 2011, there
were still under 9 000 registered Syrian refugees (although there
were undoubtedly many more outside the country on different bases).
By the end of 2012, there were almost 500 000. The most dramatic
increase came the following year, by the end of which there were
over 2 300 000. The exodus continued during 2014, reaching a total
of over 3 700 000 by year’s end. Although the rate of departures decreased
during mid-2015, renewed fighting from September onwards contributed
to a further 400 000 people leaving Syria in the following months.
By early March 2016, the total number of registered Syrian refugees
was over 4 800 000.
3. A detailed analysis of the various displacements from different
regions of Syria towards its neighbouring States over the five-year
course of the conflict is beyond the scope of the present report.
Even today, more people (around
6.6 million) are internally displaced within Syria than have fled
the country. Most of those who have left Syria had previously been
displaced within the country, usually several times. Throughout
the conflict, refugees have returned to Syria from neighbouring
countries, either because developments within Syria have permitted
it or because conditions in the country of refuge became unsustainable.
Overall, more and more people have been displaced over time and
a growing proportion of these have sought refuge in other countries. International
protection has become the only viable alternative for an ever greater
number. At the same time, it seems ever more unlikely that conditions
within Syria will allow for a mass return of refugees within the
short or even medium term.
4. Furthermore, those fleeing Syria increasingly look further
afield for sustainable protection. A survey by the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) of Syrian
refugees passing through Greece during 2015 found that 55% of those
interviewed had either not resided in a third country or had spent less
than three months there before crossing to Europe. The main reasons
for leaving the country of first asylum/transit were lack of suitable,
non-exploitative employment opportunities, financial needs, security
and protection concerns, the search for better opportunities for
their children and the hope of educational opportunities. Similarly,
research by the Danish Refugee Council amongst Syrian refugees in
Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey found that conditions in those countries,
along with the apparently interminable nature of the Syrian conflict,
were the main drivers of onward movement, with Europe being attractive
due to expectations of access to labour markets, education, medical
care and material support. For those with the means and physical capacity
to undertake the journey, the hazardous and uncertain route to Europe
is increasingly seen as preferable to the prospect of prolonged
residence in a country of first asylum. If European Union policy
towards Syrian refugees is based on the assumption that the protection
needs of most of them can be met outside Europe, these considerations
must be addressed.
5. The present report has been prepared as follow-up to the June
2015 visit by the ad hoc committee of the Bureau of the Assembly
to Istanbul and the camps for Syrian refugees in Kilis and Gaziantep
in Turkey.
The Assembly
has also adopted a number of resolutions relating to Syrian refugees,
including
Resolution
1878 (2012) on the situation on Syria, which urged Council of Europe
member States to respond positively to UN agencies’ appeals relating
to humanitarian aid to refugees in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq
and to those affected within Syria;
Resolution 1902 (2012) on the European response to the humanitarian crisis
in Syria, which invited the international community to show solidarity
with the Syrian victims of the conflict and with neighbouring States
taking the brunt of refugees;
Resolution
1940 (2013) on the situation in the Middle East, which called for
an increase in financial assistance to Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon
in order to meet the needs of Syrian refugees;
Resolution 1971 (2014) “Syrian refugees: how to organise and support international assistance”,
which noted that the refugee situation in neighbouring countries
was steadily worsening and called on States to show generosity and
solidarity;
Resolution
2025 (2014) “Resettlement of refugees: promoting greater solidarity”,
which included specific recommendations on the situation of Syrian
refugees;
Resolution 2047
(2015) on the humanitarian consequences of the actions of the
terrorist group known as “Islamic State”, which reiterated the Assembly’s
appeal to States to show solidarity and a sense of responsibility;
and
Resolution 2073 (2015) “Countries of transit: meeting new migration and asylum
challenges”, which, whilst not explicitly mentioning Syrian refugees,
did address the situation in Turkey, examined in some detail in
the underlying report.
6. The present report will concentrate on the situation in countries
of first asylum neighbouring Syria, in particular Lebanon, Jordan
and Turkey. It will also address an often overlooked aspect of the
Syrian refugee crisis, namely the specific and especially difficult
situation of Palestinian refugees displaced from Syria (known as
“PRS”) to Jordan and Lebanon. The report will examine the social,
economic and political impact of the refugee influx on the countries
concerned and the response of the national authorities. It will
also look at the assistance provided by the international community
and the role of international agencies, notably the UNHCR, the World
Food Programme (WFP) and the United Nations Relief and Works Agency
for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), with particular
attention to the recent London Conference and the European Union-Turkey
Joint Action Plan. I will then conclude by reflecting upon future
strategy and the action that Europe should take.
2. The situation of Syrian
refugees in neighbouring countries of first asylum
2.1. Jordan
7. Jordan now hosts some 640 000
registered Syrian refugees, with a similar number of Syrians resident in
the country but not registered as refugees. Its current total population
is between 7.5 and 8 million. Jordan is not party to the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees and so does not extend legal
protection to refugees in full accordance with international standards,
although it remains bound by the customary international law prohibition
on refoulement. This is also
reflected in Jordan’s memorandum of understanding with the UNHCR,
which gives the latter the right to conduct refugee status determination
and requires it to provide for their protection. Domestic law does
not give formal residency rights to UNHCR-registered Syrian refugees,
and it has been reported that the authorities often avoid officially
recognising refugees as such under relevant domestic legal provisions.
8. Just over half of the registered refugees are minors (aged
under 18); just over half are female. Some 18% of them live in refugee
camps, the rest are “urban” refugees. By far the largest camp population
is in Za’atari (80 000), followed by Azraq (31 000), which I visited,
and the Emirati Jordanian camp (6 000). A residential block on the
outskirts of the Cyber City industrial park close to the border
with Syria, which I also visited, has been set aside for a group
of around 260 PRS. Of the registered urban refugees, the great majority live
in northern Jordan: some 178 000 in the Amman governorate, 141 000
in Irbid, 77 000 in Mafraq and 50 000 in Zarqa.
9. The main camps – Za’atari and Azraq – are well equipped, well
supplied and orderly, with many international staff of the main
international agencies present on site. Neither camp is over-populated:
indeed, the population of Za’atari has fallen from a peak of over
200 000 in April 2013 and Azraq remains more than half-empty. Azraq
in particular is very isolated – literally surrounded by desert
– and, intended as a place where newly arrived refugees are accommodated,
offers little attraction even as a medium-term solution. Most essential
needs – housing, basic medical care and education, although not
direct electricity or water supplies to each household – are met,
although in many cases food aid and medical care are insufficient.
There are very few meaningful activities available to adults other
than a small, newly opened market at which camp residents (and Jordanian
locals) can sell small items such as food, clothes, toys and electrical
items purchased outside the camp. Adults see few, if any, prospects
for the future.
10. The Cyber City site presents a very specific situation: the
unofficial explanation for its peculiar location and character is
that the Jordanian authorities suspect some of its PRS residents
of having connections to Palestine Liberation Organisation fighters
in the “Black September” civil war in 1970-71. In any event, conditions
at Cyber City are particularly grim, with facilities limited in
scope and of relatively poor quality. I was reassured to hear that
potentially many of the residents may be resettled, especially to
Canada, and urge the Jordanian authorities and responsible international
agencies to step up their efforts to find a solution to this unacceptable
situation.
11. The situation of the 525 000 urban refugees is in many ways
even more difficult than that of the refugees in camps. Housing
is a particular problem, with a serious deficit in supply causing
a 14% increase in average rental prices between January 2013 and
June 2015 and tensions between Jordanian and Syrian communities. Over
55% of refugees’ expenditure goes on accommodation, even though
more than half of Syrian refugee families share accommodation with
at least one other family. More than 20% of Syrian refugee families
do not have a rental contract, which is a prerequisite for receiving
a “service card” from the Ministry of the Interior, needed to access
public health and education services. Public health care is no longer
free for Syrian refugees: I met several who had been seriously injured
by fighting in Syria but were now unable, despite assistance, to meet
the costs of essential treatments. Last September, the WFP stopped
providing food aid to 229 000 urban Syrian refugees in Jordan because
of insufficient funding. There is only very limited access to formal employment:
many work irregularly, outside the protection of labour regulations
and vulnerable to low pay and other forms of exploitation. Those
who do work without permits risk detention, fines and, potentially,
deportation to Syria. Despite the Jordanian authorities’ efforts,
including introduction of “double-shift” schooling, more than one
third of Syrian refugee children do not attend school, with between
11% and 33% being ineligible due to admission regulations. Some
attend non-formal schools instead, where they may be at risk of
radicalisation. Many girls scheduled to attend the “second (afternoon)
shift” are not sent to school, as their families are afraid to have
them return home after sunset. Furthermore, as households’ savings
and positive coping mechanisms are exhausted, children are increasingly
being taken out of school and sent to work in various manual and/or menial
jobs, or even to beg, since the authorities are perceived as being
more lenient towards children working irregularly. In May 2015,
14% of interviewed Syrian refugee families relied on their children’s
wages to pay the rent. There are also widespread reports of families
resorting to under-age marriage of daughters, including “temporary”
marriages that amount to little more than sanctioned prostitution,
and of more blatant forms of prostitution and trafficking. Despite,
or perhaps because of, increasing recourse to such negative coping mechanisms,
two thirds of urban refugees have taken on high levels of debt.
Over 80% of Syrian refugees in Jordan live below the national poverty
line; by the UNHCR’s standards, which set the level at which cash assistance
is given, 69% are in poverty.
12. Also of acute concern is a group of over 20 000 Syrian refugees
blocked by the Jordanian authorities at the border with Syria in
the far north-east of the country. Many of them have been waiting
to enter Jordan for several months. The Jordanian authorities admit
only a few dozen each day, citing security concerns based on the
fact that the refugees originated from “IS”-controlled areas. The
previously uninhabited crossing points at Hadalat and Rubkan, where
the refugees are now living in makeshift tents, are in a desert
region some 150 km from the nearest town, which complicates and
greatly increases the expense of delivering essential humanitarian
aid. The Jordanian authorities should accelerate their security
vetting and seek to bring a swift end to this awful situation.
13. The presence of so many urban refugees has put enormous strain
on Jordan’s infrastructure and services, including water supplies
(Jordan already had one of the lowest levels of water resource availability per
capita in the world) and sanitation, solid waste disposal, health
services and education, as well as affecting the environment and
labour and housing markets. Meeting these challenges is all the
more difficult as the Jordanian economy faces significant difficulties
on account of the conflict in Syria, an important trading partner, including
the disruption of overland trade routes to Iraq and the Gulf and
via Turkey to Europe, and greatly reduced revenue from tourism.
Despite successfully completing an International Monetary Fund emergency programme
in November, gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2015 was around
2.5%, one third of the level of 2010, and public debt had increased
to 90% of GDP, after having fallen over the previous decade. Unemployment
increased from 11.4% in the first half of 2014 to 12.5% in the same
period of 2015. This may be due at least in part to displacement
of Jordanian workers by Syrians, although the latter are mostly employed
in the agriculture and construction sectors that are traditionally
unattractive to Jordanians and whose labour force was previously
provided by migrant workers; since the influx of Syrian refugees,
the Jordanian authorities no longer grant visas to foreign workers.
It has, however, been reported that the presence of so many Syrian
refugees working irregularly has depressed wages for unskilled labour
in the informal economy.
14. The people of Jordan have shown remarkable generosity in welcoming
Syrian refugees – despite previously having hosted large-scale waves
of refugees from Palestine and Iraq – but the country’s social and economic
capacity to continue providing for so many desperate people is clearly
reaching its limits. The Jordanian Government has prepared a Response
Plan 2016-2018 (JRP2016-18), intended to continue the “evolution
of the response from a mainly refugee approach to a resilience-based
comprehensive framework that bridges the divide between short-term
humanitarian, and longer-term developmental responses”. A key theme
of the Jordanian Government’s approach is to ensure balance in the
support given to Syrian refugees and that made available to host
communities and the wider society and economy. The Plan contains
costed response strategies for the education, energy, environment,
health, justice, livelihoods and food security, local governance
and municipal services, social protection, shelter, transport and
“WASH” (water, sanitation and hygiene) sectors, amounting to a total
of almost US$2.5 billion for “refugee interventions” and over US$2.3 billion
for “resilience strengthening”. In its “Jordan Compact’ presented
to the “Supporting Syria and the Region Conference” in London, the
Jordanian Government also explained its intention to “[turn] the
Syrian refugee crisis into a development opportunity that attracts
new investments and opens up the EU market with simplified rules
of origin, creating jobs for Jordanians and Syrian refugees whilst
supporting the post-conflict Syrian economy”.
2.2. Lebanon
15. There are now around 1 070 000
registered Syrian refugees in the country, a drop of 115 000 from
the peak of April 2015, but to which should be added some 400 000
other Syrians, mostly unregistered refugees. Lebanon has a population
of 5 850 000. In total, Syrian refugees amount to around a quarter
of the population. Like Jordan, Lebanon has not signed the 1951
Refugee Convention and relies on the UNHCR to register refugees;
it does not extend legal protection to refugees in full accordance
with international standards, although it remains bound by the customary
international law prohibition on refoulement.
In May 2015, the Lebanese Government instructed the UNHCR to suspend
registration of new arrivals: the Minister for Social Affairs, Rashid
Derbas, explained that Lebanon could no longer absorb such a high
number of refugees. In order to renew their annual residence permits,
refugees must pay US$200, and provide proof of settled residence
(certified lease or deed), a notarised pledge not to work and proof
of their financial means. Many, if not most, Syrian refugees are
unable to fulfil these requirements. Their resulting irregular status
creates a constant fear of arrest, detention and abuse for being
undocumented, and a sense of acute insecurity. It is easy to understand
how this may give rise to a desire to seek more sustainable protection
elsewhere.
16. Slightly more than half of the registered refugees are under
18 and slightly more than half are female: the gender disparity
is particularly pronounced in the 18 to 59 age group, which suggests
that many working-age men have either not registered, returned to
Syria or sought refuge elsewhere (which may have future family reunification
implications), and is reflected in the fact that one fifth of households
are headed by women. Some 261 000 live in the northern coastal region,
312 000 in and around Beirut, 125 000 in the southern coastal region
and 372 000 in the Bekaa valley, separated by mountains from the
Beirut coastal plain and in winter, often cut off by bad weather.
There are no official refugee camps for Syrians in Lebanon, apparently
because of the authorities’ fear that permanent camps will develop,
like those for Palestinian refugees. Syrian refugees live in urban
accommodation or one of the 1 900 informal settlements spread across
the country.
17. There was a housing crisis in Lebanon even before the mass
arrival of Syrian refugees, which has of course only made it worse.
Syrian refugees pay as much as US$200 per month, 90% of their income,
often to live in substandard property such as garages, sheds and
unfinished buildings. Some must pay rent to farmers for the corners
of fields where they have erected tents. Those living in tents in
the Bekaa valley, which lies at an average altitude of 1 000 m,
have to contend with sub-zero temperatures and snow during winter;
at least four died in a January 2015 snowstorm. Two thirds of Syrian
refugees are behind with rental payments and 20% have been threatened
with eviction; in 2015, 18 000 were evicted from their homes. The
UNHCR reported in August 2015 that 70% of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
were living below the national poverty line. 89% of Syrian refugee
households are in debt, at an average of US$842 per household. Syrian
refugees have difficulty accessing public health care, for which
they must pay. Poverty and debt mean that refugees also have difficulty affording
sufficient food, due also to the fact that on account of insufficient
funding, the WFP in July 2015 halved the value of its monthly food
aid to US$13.50, although the level has since partially recovered
to US$21.60. Refugees whom I met at a store equipped to receive
payment via WFP e-cards complained that this amount was sufficient
only for the first two weeks in the month, after which their diet
became extremely restricted.
18. Of 370 000 school-age Syrian refugee children in Lebanon,
180 000 do not go to school, and some 40 000 are in “non-formal”
education (outside the Lebanese education system). It is hoped that
this year, 200 000 Syrian children will be able to attend public
schools for free, with international agencies and donors covering
the annual fee of US$60 (also for Lebanese children from impoverished
families). The Lebanese authorities also intend to close down “non-formal”
schools, whose curricula are unsupervised and qualifications uncertified,
and which may be responsible for radicalisation of refugee children.
As in Jordan, the effect of poverty, debt, lack of work permits
and the threat of arrest, detention and potential deportation for
adults working irregularly, failure of positive coping mechanisms
and, at least until recently, difficulties in accessing education
is that children are often sent to work from a young age, exposing
them to abuse and exploitation and damaging their life prospects
by depriving them of education. There are also widespread reports
of child marriage, which violates the rights of the girl child –
and of prostitution, including under the guise of “temporary marriages”.
19. The Lebanese economy has suffered since the outbreak of war
in Syria. Government sources told me that in 2010, the economy grew
by 8% but by the end of 2015, there was zero or even negative growth (although
the World Bank continues to report growth of around 2.5% per annum),
despite the estimated 1.3% positive growth effect of aid and aid-related
expenditure. The budget deficit has risen to 9% of GDP per annum, with
total public debt standing at 138% of GDP, 16 points ahead of the
level projected without the crisis. The reasons are similar to those
in Jordan, including the loss of Syria as an export market, especially
for agricultural produce, and decreased tourist revenue. The agricultural
and construction sectors had relied on Syrian labour for the past
30 years: around 300 000 Syrians came to Lebanon each year as seasonal
migrant labour; when the conflict forced them to flee Syria, they
brought their families with them to Lebanon and stayed. The fact
that there are now a far greater number of Syrian refugees, many
of whom have no choice but to work irregularly (it has been reported
that 90% of Syrian refugees in work have no formal employment contract),
has added to the negative impact on Lebanese labour markets and
wages: between 2012 and 2014, the unemployment rate doubled to over
20% (30% for young people). To illustrate the strain placed on resources
and public services: since 2011, demand for water has increased
by 28% and municipal spending on waste disposal by 40%.
20. Lebanon has some advantages in responding to the refugee crisis,
notably adequate water resources, its strong agricultural and finance
sectors and a diaspora of at least 12 million that sent remittances
worth €9 billion in 2014, equivalent to 18% of GDP. Politically,
however, it is a much more fragile State, with a weak central government
and far greater potential for inter-communal and sectarian conflict.
One need only recall the 1975-1990 civil war, the ensuing Israeli
and Syrian occupations and intermittent conflicts over the past decade
to imagine how precarious the domestic situation is and how easily
it could be disrupted, with potentially disastrous consequences.
The November 2015 “IS” suicide bombings in Bourj el-Barajneh, which killed
around 40 people and were apparently planned and committed by a
group of mainly Syrians, followed by the reported revenge attack
on a mastermind figure by Syrian and Hezbollah agents, illustrate
how things could quickly deteriorate.
21. Despite this delicate situation, the people of Lebanon have
shown exceptional hospitality towards Syrian refugees, perhaps on
account of their own experience of the suffering caused by civil
war. However, as time has passed and numbers and pressures have
grown, tensions have increased. This is especially evident in the evolution
of border policy from one of “open doors” in the early years of
the Syrian conflict, to a restrictive policy, denying access to
Syrians from non-bordering regions and promoting returns and the
establishment of camps in “safe” areas of Syria, in June 2014, to
effective closure of the border to Syrian refugees and the introduction of
onerous registration requirements in January 2015. These measures
have been accompanied by public statements calling for a reduction
in the number of Syrian refugees, a view that I heard expressed
in my meeting with Lebanese parliamentarians. When compared to the
vitriolic, xenophobic rhetoric of many European politicians faced
with relatively insignificant refugee challenges, however, it is
difficult to be critical of the Lebanese position: the country’s
generosity is reaching its limits.
22. The government has prepared a “Lebanon Crisis Response Plan
2015-16” (LCRP2015-16). This recognises that “Lebanon’s government
and communities continue to face critical tests of stability. At
the same time, the most vulnerable Lebanese, displaced Syrians,
and Palestinian refugees are reaching the end of their coping capacities”.
The Lebanese response is based on a three-fold strategy: ensure
humanitarian assistance and protection for the most vulnerable,
both Syrian refugees and impoverished Lebanese; strengthen national capacity
to ensure access to and quality of basic public services; and reinforcing
Lebanon’s economic, social, institutional and environmental stability.
Like the JRP2016-18 (see above), the LCRP2015-16 takes a costed, sectorial
approach, with $2.48 billion funding required in total for 2016.
2.3. Turkey
23. There are now 2 715 789 Syrian
refugees in Turkey, whose population in 2015 was 78 741 000: this makes
Turkey the country with the largest refugee population in the world,
although in terms of refugees per capita it is far surpassed by
Jordan and especially Lebanon. Around 10% of Syrian refugees in
Turkey live in the 26 camps in the south of the country. Many non-camp
refugees also live in the south of the country, particularly in
Gaziantep, Sanliurfa, Hatay and Kilis, where in some urban centres
they outnumber the local population. A further concentration, reportedly
as large as 366 000, lives in Istanbul. Turkey has ratified the 1951
Refugee Convention and 1967 Protocol but applies a geographical
limitation restricting refugee status to persons fleeing persecution
in a European country, which excludes Syrian refugees. Under the
2013 Law on Foreigners and International Protection (LFIP), however,
Syrian refugees can benefit from “temporary protection”, analogous
to that under the 1951 Refugee Convention, including protection
against refoulement (although
there is a growing number of reports that Turkey is engaging in
“push-backs” of Syrian refugees at its Syrian border). Turkey conducts
its own registration procedure with technical assistance from the
UNHCR. Turkish policy appears to have changed in recent weeks as
thousands of refugees fleeing the intensified fighting around Aleppo
have reportedly been denied entry to Turkish territory, with 110 000
now stuck in camps on the Syrian side of the border, an increase
of 58 000 in two weeks.
24. Conditions in Turkey’s Syrian refugee camps are generally
seen as exceeding international standards: each family has its own
tent, there are medical facilities, schools (offering the Syrian
curriculum) attended by 90% of school-age children, supermarkets
where refugees may buy food using e-cards administered by the WFP,
and a “market” with small businesses run by Syrian refugees. However,
climatic conditions in the camps can be extreme, with temperatures
ranging from -10°C in winter to over 40°C in summer. These conditions remain
vulnerable to funding, however, as shown in February 2015, when
a US$71 million shortfall forced the WFP to stop providing aid in
nine camps, leaving 66 000 refugees without food aid.
25. Despite Turkey’s size, the fact that non-camp Syrian refugees
are concentrated in a few regions has inevitably placed great strain
on the housing market, increasing rental prices by 60% to 70% in
provinces along the border. As in Jordan and Lebanon, many refugees
are forced to live in substandard accommodation (only 25% of respondents
in one survey had access to heating and 35%, easy access to toilets
and showers) and/ or to share overcrowded lodgings with other families
(32% of dwellings, of an average size of 2.1 rooms, housed more
than one family). It has been reported that Turkish landlords have
become reluctant to rent to Syrian refugees; at the same time, some
Turks consider that landlords prefer Syrian refugees as tenants
as they are prepared to accept overcrowded conditions. Health care
for non-camp Syrian refugees is theoretically free of charge and
has been generally well administered in co-operation with WHO and
other international agencies, with broadly satisfactory outcomes,
despite, for example, a 30% to 40% increase in hospitals’ patient loads.
There have also been some problems, such as the refusal in March
2015 of 5 000 Istanbul pharmacists to provide medicines to Syrian
refugees on account of the government failing to reimburse them.
26. In 2014-15, only 25% of school-age Syrian refugee children
living outside the camps attended school; in
Syria before the war, 99% had attended primary school and 82% secondary
school. Some have lost over four years of schooling; others who
arrived in Turkey before reaching school age have never been to
school. Although the Turkish authorities have made efforts to improve
access to education outside the camps, including by opening schools
at weekends, lifting formal residency requirements and accrediting
“temporary education centres” that teach an approved Arabic-language
curriculum, the future prospects of a generation of Syrian refugee
children are being undermined. Many are in informal employment,
notably in agriculture and garment-making, or resort to begging,
and are at risk of exploitation and other forms of abuse. Child
marriage is also an increasingly common negative coping mechanism
(in 2014, the Turkish authorities reported that 14% of Syrian girls
between 15 and 18 years of age were married; as most ceremonies
would be religious rather than civil, it is likely that the true
figure is higher), as is prostitution, including in the form of
“temporary marriages”.
27. Turkey estimates to have spent over €7 billion supporting
Syrian refugees since the beginning of the crisis. Initially, it
met all related expenses itself, but since 2012 it has also called
for and received international aid, although in relatively modest
amounts. Annual economic growth stood at 9.2% in 2010 but by 2012
had fallen to 2.2%. This was partly due to disruption of trade with
Syria, estimated to have cost US$6 billion between 2011 and 2014,
and a drop in tourism revenue of US$1.6 billion over the same period;
although other factors such as the European Union’s financial crisis
and a 25% increase in defence expenditure between 2010 and 2014
will also have had significant effects. Recent reports suggest,
however, that the economic activity of Syrian refugees and the government’s
expenditure on supporting them has boosted the economy, with higher than
expected growth rates of 4% in 2015 leading the government to raise
its expectations for 2016 from 4% to 4.5%. The 2013 Law on Foreigners
and International Protection in principle permitted Syrian refugees
to work, but the necessary secondary legislation was not adopted
until January 2016. As a result, six months after receiving identity
cards, refugees may apply for permits that allow them to work only
in the province where they are registered but which allow them to
do any type of work; employers may hire up to 10% of their workforce from
amongst Syrian refugees, with no limit in the agricultural sector.
In the meantime, large numbers of Syrian refugees had been working
irregularly, and many undoubtedly continue to do so, often in exploitative conditions.
This has had a displacement effect on Turkish workers, especially
women and the less educated, in the informal sector, including agriculture,
construction and garment-making; at the same time, however, it has
increased opportunities for some categories of Turkish workers,
notably less educated men, in an expanded formal sector. There is
nevertheless a perception amongst Turks that Syrian refugees “take
our jobs”. The presence of large numbers of non-camp Syrian refugees
especially in the southern provinces has placed great strain on
municipal services, notably management of solid waste and waste
water, and infrastructure.
28. There are a number of so-called “pre-removal detention centres”
in Turkey in which refugees, including unaccompanied minors, are
detained. The situation in these “centres” is such that a human
rights organisation wrote to the EU Delegation requesting that it
visit one of them. When the EU delegation visited the “centre”, they
found only refugees who arrived the day before, all previous detainees
having been transferred to an unknown location. On 11 February,
a group of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) issued a press
release criticising the situation in these “centres” and requesting
access, which has so far been denied; only the Red Crescent has
access. At the beginning of March, when I was in Turkey with a delegation
of the Human Rights Committee of the German Parliament, we were
denied access to the “pre-removal detention centre” in Izmir.
2.4. Palestinian refugees formerly
living in Syria
29. As noted above, Palestinian
refugees, especially those formerly living in Syria, have been particularly badly
affected by the conflict. Families displaced from Syria have been
made refugees for the second or even third time, and the wider consequences
of the refugee crisis in countries such as Jordan and Lebanon have had
an impact on Palestinian refugee communities already living there.
At the same time, the fact that they are almost exclusively supported
by UNRWA (and not by the UNHCR, in accordance with the 1951 Refugee Convention
and the Statute of the High Commissioner) has left them somewhat
outside the reach of much of the international aid intended for
Syrian refugees. Even more inexcusably, because most are technically stateless,
they are often not recognised as Syrian refugees when arriving in
Europe, even if they hold UNRWA documents and their families had
been living in Syria for generations. Furthermore, the funding requirements of
operations to support Syrian refugees may have had an impact on
the provision of services to Palestinian refugees by UNRWA, which
faced a severe financial crisis in 2015 that would have led to postponement
of the opening of the UNRWA school year had it not been for last-minute
donations from Gulf States.
30. UNRWA has launched a “Syria Regional Crisis Emergency Appeal
2016”. The Appeal calls for a total of almost US$410 million in
funding for 2016, including US$63 million for Lebanon, now hosting
42 000 PRS (with 450 000 Palestinian refugees in total), and US$17
million for Jordan, which hosts 18 000 PRS (2 097 000 Palestinian
refugees in total). Palestinian refugees from Syria are amongst
the most vulnerable of the already vulnerable population of Syrian
refugees, and without this funding their acute protection needs
in Jordan and Lebanon cannot be met.
3. The European response
3.1. Strategic aims
31. The primary goal of the international
community must be to secure peace in Syria and establish conditions
allowing the safe return of refugees. This is also what the refugees
themselves want most. Since peace is unlikely in at least the short
term and safe return for the majority difficult even in the medium
term, however, international protection will remain a necessity.
This should be provided as close to home as possible: not because
Syrian refugees are not Europe’s problem, or because the presence
of Syrian refugees is a danger for European countries (neither of
which is true); but because it will facilitate future return and
in the meantime allows refugees to maintain ties with their homes
and contact with family members still in Syria. It is also true
that many Syrian refugees feel more at ease in societies similar
to their own; and that it is more cost-effective to provide humanitarian
aid to refugees in countries such as Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey
than it is in western Europe. Setting aside the baseless fears and
xenophobia of those who consider Syrian refugees to be a threat,
therefore, it is good policy to support the countries neighbouring
Syria that are already bearing the real burden of the refugee crisis.
Reducing “irregular migration” and the number of asylum applications
in Europe may be a consequence of this policy being effective, but
should not be considered as the primary aim: we must put the refugees
first. If the refugees´ needs cannot be met in the neighbouring
countries, due to the fact that these have reached the limits of
their absorption capacity, it is imperative also to put in place
solutions outside the region.
32. The above studies of the situations in Jordan, Lebanon and
Turkey show that all three countries are under extreme social, political
and economic strain. Whilst there are differences between the situations
in each, there are also many common elements. From the refugees’
perspective, these include uncertain legal status and protection
(especially in Jordan and Lebanon), lack of decent, affordable housing,
food shortages, lack of work permits leading to irregular employment
and exploitation, poverty and debt, inadequate access to healthcare,
inadequate access to education, and recourse to negative coping
strategies such as child labour, early marriage and prostitution.
From the host communities’ perspective, the common elements include housing
shortages and rent increases, increased food prices, competition
in the labour market and reduced wages (especially in informal employment),
pressure on municipal services and infrastructure, environmental degradation,
and huge budgetary burdens that have increased public debt and undermined
economic growth; overall, the impact has been felt most by the least
well off, who often live alongside non-camp refugees in the same
neighbourhoods. From the perspective of both, the current situation
is untenable. The differences, however, are also important and must
not be overlooked: they include Jordan’s relative isolation from
easy export opportunities and lack of obvious comparative advantages,
and Lebanon’s socio-political fragility.
33. To a large extent, many of these problems can be alleviated
by money. Money alone may not be sufficient, but it is certainly
a necessary precondition for the countries concerned to provide
sustainable protection to most of the enormous numbers of refugees
they host, whilst protecting their own societies against the resulting
stresses and strains. Even if this is achieved, however, it does
not relieve the international community of the obligation to provide
protection primarily to those most vulnerable refugees whose particular needs
cannot otherwise be met. Resettlement programmes for such people,
and for sufficient numbers of others to relieve some of the burden
on countries of first asylum, are an essential part of any future
strategy. But if the international community does not do enough
to support countries such as Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, refugees
will be forced to seek protection elsewhere, and instead of orderly
resettlement prioritising the most vulnerable, the chaotic, indiscriminate
flow of desperate refugees through Greece and the western Balkans
will continue – to Europe’s everlasting shame. Closing borders or
restricting admission to just a limited number of refugees – as
is now happening on a daily basis – is in no way an appropriate
solution to any of the underlying causes of the crisis; never mind
the fact that the Greek government and people cannot cope with the
consequences of a situation which evolved due to the failures of
the international community.
3.2. The London Conference
34. The London Conference on Supporting
Syria and the Region of 4 February 2016 had three objectives: to
raise significantly increased funding to meet both immediate needs
and mid-term humanitarian, resilience and development financial
commitments (up to 2020); to address longer-term needs by identifying
ways to strengthen resilience by creating economic opportunities
and jobs and providing education opportunities; and to maintain
pressure on parties to the conflict to protect civilians affected
by it, and to ensure that the international community is well prepared
to support a co-ordinated stabilisation effort once conditions allow. Noting
that only 56% of the 2015 UN-co-ordinated inter-agency appeals had
been funded, the Conference generated pledges from States of over
US$11 billion: US$5.9 billion for 2016 and a further US$5.4 billion
for 2017-20. Multilateral banks and other donors announced around
US$40 billion in loans, of which some (including US$200 million
from the World Bank for Lebanon and Jordan) would be on concessional
terms. The Final Declaration welcomed host countries’ commitment
to allow refugees access to labour markets and offered support in
areas such as access to external markets, concessional financing
and external support for job creation, estimating that up to 1.1
million jobs could be created. It also recognised the specific needs
of Palestinian refugees, including presumably additional but unspecified
funding for UNRWA.
35. Whilst these results are certainly impressive and the close
involvement of Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey in the London Conference
a reassuring sign that their particular needs were taken into account,
the Final Declaration itself is not a concrete result. Experience
shows that funding pledges are often not fulfilled. Furthermore,
the funding may not be sufficient: the US$5.9 billion promised for
2016 is intended to cover a wide range of activities, whereas the
UN-led Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP) alone calls for
exactly that amount of funding only for Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.
The expected eventual outcome is also dependent on a number of assumptions
that may or may not be realistic, including the capacity of the
host countries’ economies to exploit new export markets and generate
high levels of new employment. Nevertheless, the London Conference
has certainly raised the international community’s awareness of
the enormous challenges facing countries that neighbour Syria and
host large Syrian refugee populations, and reflects a recognition
that the situation requires a co-ordinated international response.
It is absolutely crucial that funding pledges are honoured in full,
but also that the international community, and especially European States
and the European Union, do not conclude that their responsibilities
have been fully discharged simply by promising money.
36. That said, it must be recalled that the Syrian refugee crisis
is the responsibility not only of neighbouring States and of Europe,
but of the international community as a whole. Other States, including
in the Middle East region, should also take a similar approach based
on providing not only financial aid, as many pledged to do at the
London Conference, but also humanitarian pathways for admission
of Syrian refugees as such.
3.3. The EU-Turkey Joint Action
Plan
37. On 15 October, the European
Union and Turkey agreed a Joint Action Plan to address the refugee
crisis, and on 29 November they agreed to activate it. The Joint
Action Plan seeks to address the crisis by addressing root causes
of the massive influx of Syrians; supporting Syrian refugees and
their host communities in Turkey; and strengthening co-operation
to prevent “irregular migration”. The European Union stated its
intention to mobilise in a sustained manner substantial and concrete
new funds, appropriate to the emerging needs, to support Turkey’s
efforts to meet the challenge of the Syrian refugee influx. On the
basis of a comprehensive jointly-conducted needs assessment, priority
should be given to humanitarian assistance, legal, administrative and
psychological support, community centres, self-sufficiency and economic
participation, social exclusion, access to education and infrastructure
and services. For its part, Turkey made commitments including full implementation
of the 2013 Law on Foreigners and International Protection, ensuring
access to education and health services and meeting the protection
needs of vulnerable people.
38. Unfortunately, the agreement on implementation of the Joint
Action Plan was followed by a period of unseemly squabbling within
the European Union over funding, which was not resolved until early
February, when agreement was reached on where the €3 billion would
come from (€1 billion from the EU budget and the rest from member
States). In the meantime, the European Commission produced a First
Implementation Report covering the period 30 November to 16 December.
Whilst mainly addressing measures against “irregular migration”,
the report also noted that the Turkish Government’s “Reform Action
Group” had decided to adopt a series of measures, including, for
example, secondary legislation under the 2013 Law on Foreigners and
International Protection on work permits for Syrian refugees. The
report also noted that the EU regional Trust Fund for Syria had
adopted new financial decisions with a budget of up to €150 million
for actions in Turkey. The emphasis on border control and “irregular
migration” was echoed by European Commission Vice-President Frans
Timmermans when visiting Turkey on 11 January 2016. It is important
that EU support for Syrian refugees in Turkey does not become conditional
on a reduction in the number of persons – far from all of whom are
Syrian refugees – crossing the Aegean Sea from Turkey to the Greek
islands.
39. A second Implementation report published on 10 February 2016
similarly gave priority to “irregular migration”. It also noted
the adoption of, amongst other things, the secondary legislation
on work permits. For its part, the second report noted that the
European Union had created a “Facility for Refugees in Turkey” to administer
the €3 billion fund, along with a mechanism to co-ordinate the efforts
of the European Union and its member States in supporting Turkey’s
efforts to host Syrian refugees. The Facility “will deliver assistance
as soon as possible”, with foreseen priorities including humanitarian
assistance, socio-economic support (education and training), access
to the labour market, health care and social inclusion, and municipal infrastructures.
A first needs assessment has been announced, to identify projects
to be funded by the Facility. The report mentions that since the
beginning of the crisis, the European Union had already provided
€365 million in direct support to Syrian refugees and host communities
in Turkey. A further special meeting of the EU heads of State or
government with Turkey took place on 7 March 2016 in Brussels, with
implementation of the Joint Action Plan a priority issue on the
agenda.
3.4. High-level meeting on global
responsibility sharing through pathways for admission of Syrian
refugees
40. On 30 March, the UNHCR will
host in Geneva a “High-level meeting on global responsibility sharing through
pathways for admission of Syrian refugees”. The aim of this event
is twofold: to create or expand humanitarian pathways for admission
of Syrian refugees, specifically those with “compelling needs”,
such as resettlement/humanitarian admission, private sponsorship,
humanitarian visas and emergency evacuation; and to facilitate access
to additional pathways for admission such as admission of relatives
(beyond existing family reunification grounds), academic scholarships
and apprenticeships, and labour mobility schemes, or by relaxing
or removing legal barriers or administrative requirements for admission.
The aim is to secure such pathways for at least 10% of the Syrian
refugee population over the next three years.
41. I very much hope that this initiative is met with the same
enthusiasm as the London Conference. Both approaches are necessary
if the international community is to respond effectively to the
Syrian refugee crisis: money alone will not be enough to ensure
adequate protection of the refugees and the resilience of their
host communities.
4. Conclusions and recommendations
42. The Syrian conflict, which
rapidly spiralled out of control and for which many other countries
bear at least some responsibility, has generated perhaps the most
severe refugee crisis the world has seen since the Second World
War. Syria’s neighbouring countries, whether implicated or not,
are bearing the brunt of this challenge and Europe has so far failed
to do enough to live up to its moral and legal responsibilities.
43. The European response must be based on certain clear principles:
those fleeing the conflict in Syria are entitled to international
protection; that protection is usually, but not always, best provided
in countries close to home; those countries cannot provide that
protection without extensive external support, which must be tailored
to their particular circumstances; that support must include sufficient
financial assistance, as well as technical measures including privileged
access to export markets; and it must be accompanied by humanitarian
pathways for admission of Syrian refugees, including by resettlement,
that prioritise the most vulnerable and avoid the need to take dangerous,
irregular routes to seeking protection in Europe. In particular, cases
of family reunification should be given priority; the issuing of
visas for family members with either children or parents in European
countries should be quick and procedurally streamlined. Several
figures, including in German Visa Departments, have proposed that
visa requirements be lifted for family members, who should instead
be issued with entry permits following confirmation of their identity.
As only 3% of applicants from Turkey are refused visas, the cumbersome
visa procedure should be omitted for all applicants.
44. International organisations, especially the United Nations
and its subsidiary organs, should employ greater proportions of
local staff and also refugees, following the example of UNRWA, instead
of recruiting large numbers of international staff who are disproportionately
expensive. For the refugees concerned, this could also open new
perspectives. Beyond that, the refugees’ needs could in many cases
be much better met by staff speaking their language and having the
same background.
45. Initiatives such as the London Conference, the EU-Turkey Joint
Action Plan and the Geneva meeting must be given equal importance
and considered as forming the basis of a package of internationally
co-ordinated measures. Most importantly, the international community,
including European States and the European Union, must be prepared
to do more by resettlement and family reunification if their current
efforts prove insufficient.