Thousands of refugees return home to Syria from Lebanon after Israeli strikes

Currently, 532,357 Syrian refugees are registered with the UN Human Rights Council. (SANA)
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Updated 03 March 2026
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Thousands of refugees return home to Syria from Lebanon after Israeli strikes

  • Jousieh border crossing in Homs province becomes a busy point of entry as growing numbers of Syrians return amid escalating regional conflict
  • Authorities report that traffic between Syria and Lebanon is flowing without any disruptions

LONDON: Thousands of refugees living in Lebanon have returned to their native Syria since Saturday, as Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon intensify amid tensions over the US-Israeli conflict against Iran, and Hezbollah rocket attacks on northern Israel.

Raed Al-Saleh, Syria’s disaster management and emergency response minister, said the Jousieh border crossing between Qaa in Lebanon and Qusair in Syria’s Homs province has become a busy entry point as growing numbers of Syrians return.

Elsewhere, Syrian Civil Defense teams, working under the Emergency and Disaster Management Ministry, implemented a humanitarian-response plan at the Jdeidet Yabous border crossing between rural Damascus and Masnaa as large numbers of people arrived from Lebanon.

Authorities said that traffic between Syria and Lebanon was flowing without disruptions, the Syrian Arab News Agency reported.

Israel has attacked several targets in Lebanon, including Beirut, after a missile fired from southern Lebanon hit northern Israel on Monday.

Currently, 532,357 Syrian refugees are registered with the UN Human Rights Council. However, the Lebanese government estimates the true number who fled the civil war in Syria, which began in 2011 and ended with the collapse of the Assad regime in December 2024, is about 1.12 million.


HRW says Israel’s Lebanon evacuation risks violating laws of war

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HRW says Israel’s Lebanon evacuation risks violating laws of war

  • “Calling on everyone who lives south of the Litani (River) to evacuate immediately raises serious legal and humanitarian red flags,” said Kaiss
  • “How are older people, the sick and people with disabilities going to be able to evacuate immediately?”

BEIRUT: Human Rights Watch said on Thursday that the Israeli military’s call for residents of vast areas of southern Lebanon to evacuate raised “serious risks of violations of the laws of war.”
Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war when Iran-backed Hezbollah began firing rockets at Israel with Israel conducting air strikes across the country and its troops pushing into border towns.
On Thursday, Israel renewed its warning to residents of hundreds of square kilometers (miles) of southern Lebanon to evacuate because of military action.
“Calling on everyone who lives south of the Litani (River) to evacuate immediately raises serious legal and humanitarian red flags and fears for the safety of civilians,” said Ramzi Kaiss, Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch.
“How are older people, the sick and people with disabilities going to be able to evacuate immediately? And how will their safety be guaranteed as they leave?” he said in a statement from the rights group.
HRW said “the sweeping nature” of Israel’s call raised “concerns that their purpose is not to protect civilians,” adding that the area was home to hundreds of thousands of people.
The evacuation call “raises serious risks of violations of the laws of war,” it added.
Lebanese authorities said dozens of people have been killed and tens of thousands displaced from their homes since Monday.