015-01-06 09:04
Masnaa - Lebanon enforced new immigration controls at the Syrian
border on Monday in a move to gain control of the steady stream of
refugees from its much larger neighbour.
Shopkeepers and taxi
drivers on the Lebanon side of the Masnaa border crossing said thousands
of Syrians crossed the frontier on Sunday before the rules were
implemented at midnight. On Monday, the border was quiet.
A senior
security official said on Saturday that Syrians would have to apply for
entry permits for the first time and provide information about the
purpose and length of their stay.
Lebanon, whose population is
less than five million, hosts more than a million Syrian refugees and
has the highest per capita concentration of refugees in the world. The
government already started restricting refugees late last year.
It
is also home to thousands of working Syrians, many of them employed in
shops or as labourers. Resentment among the Lebanese population has
spilled over into attacks on Syrians.
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Syrians
will now have to apply for one of six types of entry permit - tourist,
business, student, transit, medical or short stay. Each permit requires
specific documentation, such as hotel bookings and $1 000 for tourists
or an invitation from a Lebanese company for business people.
Mohammed
Moukhaiber, a Syrian who drives people from the Syrian capital Damascus
to Lebanon, said he is worried he will now have to repeatedly apply for
permits and that many of the workers he transports will not qualify
under the new rules.
"It will have an effect. There are people
with business here, workers and drivers. Some have been working here for
20 years, they will surely be affected by this decision," he said.
The United Nations refugee agency UNHCR called on the government to clarify the role of refugees under the new legislation.
"Our
concern is that there is no mention of refugees in these new
regulations," spokesperson Ron Redmond said. "We'd like some information
on exactly how the procedure will be carried out to ensure the most
vulnerable can still get in."
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