Half a year after the fall of the Syrian long-term ruler Bashar al-Assad, the history of a well-known refugee camp ends. In the desert region on the border triangle near Jordan and Iraq, the last displaced persons left the Rukban camp. Only a few want to stay voluntary.
Accordingly, only 25 families remain there, including cattle shepherds who do not see a perspective for a further journey, such as the Syrian Observation Center for Human Rights in Great Britain on Saturday.
Due to the remote situation, the camp was one of the miserable and most neglected refugee camp in Syria.
According to the Observation Center, which has been reporting for years with a close network of informants about the conflict in the former civil warland, around 90,000 displaced people lived in the camp. The humanitarian situation in the camp was considered precarious. Aid organizations were difficult to reach to the camp.
Around 14 million people
In December, a rebel alliance led by the Islamist organization Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) assessed. In the meantime, the country is led by around 23 million inhabitants by a transitional government under interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa.
He was previously the leader of the Islamist HTS. With the closure of the Rukban camp, a tragic chapter ended in the Syrian escape history, said information minister Hamsa Al-Mustafa according to the Sana news agency.
The conflict in Syria started protests against the government in 2011, which were brutally depressed. This developed a civil war with international participation. About 14 million people were driven out, more than 300,000 civilians were killed in UN estimates.
Source: Krone

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