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Lebanon town warns of looming heating tragedy

A Syrian child stands in the snow in the Arsal refugee camp in the Lebanese Bekaa valley on December 15, 2013. AFP file
  • Dozens of displaced people in Syria and refugees in Lebanon have died from the cold and accidents caused by unsafe heating devices, including in Arsal.
  • Bankrupt Lebanon can no longer provide electricity nor subsidised fuel for its own citizens, let alone for the estimated 1.5 million Syrian refugees.

A Lebanese mountain town home to 70,000 Syrian refugees declared a “fuel emergency” Thursday, warning that soaring heating fuel prices would spell tragedy as winter starts to bite.

The town of Arsal, also home to 40,000 Lebanese, lies at an altitude of 1,400 meters (4,900 feet) and is regularly among the communities worst affected by harsh winters.

“Many of the refugee families in Arsal have survived previous winters, but this one is different,” Edinburgh Direct Aid, one of the few NGOs to maintain a permanent presence in Arsal, said in a statement.

The cost of fuel families need to power their stoves has risen by around 350 percent as a result of the lifting of subsidies caused by Lebanon’s financial collapse.

The value in dollars of the minimum monthly wage in the depreciated local currency now barely fetches $25, and yet each family in Arsal would need to find $350 to heat their shelters through the winter.

“Because of budget cuts, the refugee agency UNHCR and other NGOs are only able to provide funding for less than 30 percent of the needs,” Edinburgh Direct Aid said.

Arsal mayor Basel al-Hujairi consequently took the unusual step of declaring a “fuel emergency”, issuing an appeal to bridge the funding gap and raise $5.5 million.

“Please reflect on the consequences of leaving thousands of families in flimsy tents without heating in temperatures far below zero and biting winds,” the appeal said.

Dozens of displaced people in Syria and refugees in Lebanon have died from the cold and accidents caused by unsafe heating devices, including in Arsal, since the start of the Syrian conflict in 2011.

Bankrupt Lebanon can no longer provide electricity nor subsidized fuel for its own citizens, let alone for the estimated 1.5 million Syrian refugees who account for around a third of its population.