Palestine seeks pressure on Israel over refugees

President Abbas has tasked the Palestinian envoy to the UN to work with UN Secretary General on appropriate action to allow Palestinian refugees to return to Palestine.

Palestine authorities are calling on the international community to exert pressure on Israel to allow Palestinian refugees in war-torn countries in the region to enter their home land.

The Palestinian Authority official news agency Wafa reported on Saturday that President Mahmoud Abbas has tasked the Palestinian envoy to the United Nations (UN) Riyadh Mansour to work with UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on “appropriate and necessary action” to allow Palestinian refugees to return to Palestine.

“This is not only a humanitarian issue but a right for every Palestinian living in exile in refugee camps,” a statement issued by Abbas’ office said.

Reports say that the Palestinian Authority is also in contact with other international bodies, including the European Union, on pressuring Israel to avoid prohibiting Palestinian refugees from returning to their homes.

Abbas’ office “has been making contacts with the UN, EU and other relevant actors, urging them to pressurize [Israel] to allow Palestinian refugees back into” the Palestinian territories, the report by Wafa added.

Israel has been tightly controlling Palestinian borders since it occupied Palestinian territories in 1967, denying Palestinian refugees the right to return to those territories.

Palestinian refugees in the region are living in camps in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and the occupied territories.

According to the information on the website of theUN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), there are over 2 million registered Palestinian refugees in ten camps in Jordan, nearly 450,000 registered Palestinian refugees in 12 camps in Lebanon as of July 1, 2014, and over 526,740 registered Palestinian refugees in nine camps in Syriaas of January 1, 2011.

The turmoil in Syria has killed hundreds of thousands of people since 2011. As a result, hundreds of Palestinians have been also killed in Syria’s crisis. Yarmouk, the biggest Palestinian refugee camp located in the capital, Damascus, has been left all but deserted, following attacks on it by terrorists.

According to UNRWA, more than half of Palestinian refugees in Syria have been forced to leave their homes due to violence there.

Earlier this year, UNRWA announced that life for Palestinian refugees in Syria has become increasingly “unsustainable.”

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