BSS :
A slow death if they stay or possible detention if they leave: the last residents of a Syria desert camp face an unenviable choice ahead of a new “voluntary departure” programme. The nearly 10,000 displaced Syrians still living in the Rukban camp, established in 2014 on the berm between Jordan and Syria, are the last remnants of the nearly 50,000 people who lived there a few years ago.
A 55-kilometre (34-mile) radius security zone around a nearby garrison of US-led coalition troops shields camp residents from the Syrian army. But Jordan has largely sealed the border since 2016, leaving residents dependent on rare UN aid deliveries. Not a single humanitarian convoy has entered the area since September 2019.
Driven out by hunger, disease and deplorable living conditions, tens of thousands have flocked to government-held areas, risking detention and enforced disappearance by government forces.
With the situation in Rukban rapidly deteriorating, rebels and Syrian army defectors still living in the settlement must decide whether to go along with a fresh round of UN-facilitated departures-a move human rights groups have strongly advised against.
“We are caught between two fires. If we go to government-held Syria, we will perish, and if we stay in the camp, we will die a slow death,” said an army defector who asked to remain anonymous for security reasons. “Since 2016, we have been trapped in the desert,” said Mohammad Derbas al-Khalidi, head of the camp’s organising committee.
Khalidi said there are no doctors or surgeons in the camp, only a small clinic and a team of first responders.Instead of schools, children attend classes under canvas or in mud-brick buildings that need repair, he said.
“Many of the teachers sell vegetables or cigarettes in stalls at the market,” instead of teaching, Khalidi told AFP. Since 2019, more than 20,000 people have voluntarily left Rukban, according to the UN, which facilitated the voluntary departure of 329 people, with the help of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent in September that year.
Others departed independently, or with assistance from the Syrian government, which has been calling on residents to leave Rukban for more than two years. Earlier this year, the camp committee received a UN plan to resume facilitated repatriations between September and November.
Those who chose to leave would be required to spend at least 14 days in transit shelters in the government-held province of Homs, according to the plan, a copy of which was obtained by AFP. They would only be allowed to leave the shelters if they were granted permission to do so by the Syrian authorities.