GENEVA: Around 50,000 Syrians living in Lebanon have fled back over the border into Syria in the past week, the United Nations’ migration agency said Friday.
The war in the Middle East spread to Lebanon when Hezbollah launched a rocket attack at Israel early Monday, to “avenge” the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei in the US-Israeli attack on Tehran.
That prompted a swift retaliation from Israel, which has continued to bomb Lebanon since. It has also ordered the evacuation of hundreds of square kilometers (miles) of southern Lebanon and sent ground forces across the border.
“Large-scale cross-border movements” have been taking place in recent days, said Mathieu Luciano, the Lebanon mission chief for the International Organization for Migration.
“Nearly 50,000 Syrians have crossed from Lebanon into Syria over the past week, not including those who may have crossed yesterday following the evacuation orders,” he added in a statement.
IOM spokesman Mohammedali Abunajela said the escalating violence in the Middle East was raising serious concerns about further civilian suffering and displacement in a region “already facing immense challenges.”
“Alarming signs of population movement are already emerging, particularly in Lebanon and across the border into Syria,” he told journalists in Geneva.
Ayaki Ito, emergencies chief and cross-regional refugee coordinator for the UN’s refugee agency (UNHCR), said the conflict in Lebanon had “pushed many Syrian refugees residing in Lebanon to go back to Syria.”
“Some of them had already planned to return even before the conflict — but others, they are fleeing to go back home,” he told journalists in Geneva.
The UNHCR official said more than 3,000 Lebanese had crossed over into Syria to flee the conflict.
50,000 Syrians returned from Lebanon in last week: UN
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50,000 Syrians returned from Lebanon in last week: UN
- “Large-scale cross-border movements” have been taking place in recent days, said Luciano
- Abunajela said: “Alarming signs of population movement are already emerging, particularly in Lebanon and across the border into Syria”
US carrying out rescue effort after military aircraft crash in Iraq
WASHINGTON: A US military refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq on Thursday, in an incident US Central Command said involved another aircraft but was not the result of hostile or friendly fire.
The United States has surged a large number of aircraft into the Middle East to take part in operations against Iran.
In a statement, US Central Command said it was carrying out rescue efforts after the US KC-135 refueling aircraft went down. The second aircraft landed safely.
“The incident occurred in friendly airspace during Operation Epic Fury, and rescue efforts are ongoing,” the statement said, using the name of the US operation against Iran.
Since the US and Israel started carrying out strikes against Iran on February 28, seven US troops have been killed.
Reuters reported on Tuesday that as many as 150 US troops have been wounded in the US-Israeli war on Iran.










