Thursday, 5 May 2016

More than 60,000 Syrians stranded at Jordan border



A Jordanian soldier stands guard as Syrian refugees arrive to a camp on the Jordanian side at the north east of Jordan's border with Syria, at the Al-Hadalat crossing point in the eastern town of Ruwaished, on May 4, 2016. According to the Jordanian Commander of the Border Guards Brigadier Saber Al-Mahayreh, around 5000 Syrians fleeing from recent attacks on the northern Syrian city of Aleppo are trying to cross into Jordan in search of safety and most are exhausted and desperately in need of help and medical treatment. / AFP PHOTO / KHALIL MAZRAAWI

Around 64,000 Syrians are stranded at the border with Jordan after intensified violence around Aleppo, Jordanian border guards said on Thursday. 
 
The kingdom, which is already home to more than 630,000 Syrian refugees, introduced additional security checks at the Hadalat and Rokbane border crossings at the start of the year, leading tens of thousands more to congregate along the frontier.

“The number of refugees has hit 59,000 at Rokbane and it’s rising,” the head of Jordan’s border guards General Saber Al-Mahayra told reporters on Thursday.

Another officer told AFP that 5,000 others were massed at Hadalat, around 70 kilometres (40 miles) further west.

Mahayra said nearly 5,500 had arrived at Rokbane in the last 24 hours, an influx he attributed to increased fighting around Syria’s second city Aleppo, where more than 280 civilians have died in recent weeks.

Jordan has insisted it must screen newcomers to ensure they are genuine refugees and not jihadists seeking to infiltrate the country.

The kingdom is now allowing in only a few dozen refugees each day after screening.

According to Mahayra, around 2,000 Syrians currently camping near the border are suspected by Jordanian authorities of involvement with the Islamic State group.

Weapons have already been seized from some would-be refugees along the border, he added.
After Syria’s conflict erupted in 2011, Jordan initially kept open 45 crossing points along its 378 kilometre (235 mile) frontier.

But after a mass influx into the kingdom — Amman says the true number of Syrians in Jordan is closer to 1.4 million — there are now just five crossing points open, and three of those are reserved for the wounded.

Syria’s conflict began with anti-government protests but fighting quickly escalated into a multi-faceted war that has killed more than 270,000 people and forced millions from their homes.

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