1. Home
  2. Middle East and North Africa
  3. Lebanon

Despair, trauma, discontent among Nahr al-Bared’s impoverished Palestinians

A toilet and kitchen area are contained within the 18-square-metre units and residents say water from the units above leaks through the ceilings, while sewage running under the floorboards is a sanitary hazard. Hugh Macleod/IRIN

They look like cargo crates: long lines of prefabricated steel units, stacked two high, set on the edge of the ruined Nahr al-Bared Palestinian refugee camp in northern Lebanon.

Inside each airless 18 square metre unit there is a toilet, gas burner and tatty mattresses on the bare wooden floor. This is the bedroom, bathroom and kitchen for Palestinian families like Hyat Jundi’s, whose home in Nahr al-Bared was destroyed in last summer’s battle between the army and Islamist militants.

“All I do all day is fight with the neighbours above about the water that spills down into our room,” said Jundi, 55, as some of her four young children bustle around. “I’m irritable because I have backache from sleeping on the floor.”

Jundi’s husband, a bin man for the UN’s Palestinian relief organisation UNRWA, has two other wives with children, so is only able to give her around US$150 a month, she said. Food comes from UNRWA handouts and donations from the Lebanese Future Movement of parliamentary leader Saad Hariri.

Along the dark, dank corridor and up some steps, 19-year-old Marzouka Mohammed Khadr, a young Lebanese who married a Palestinian from Nahr al-Bared, shows us the room where she is raising her young family.

“We used to have a private kitchen and bathroom; now it’s all in the same room,” she said, pointing out the cockroaches scuttling into the cracks in the wooden floor beneath her makeshift sink. Flies buzz around as the breeze catches the smell of sewage seeping from the floor.

More on Nahr El-Bared
 Aid agencies grapple with coordination issues
 Fatah says it will take over security at all Palestinian refugee camps
 ICRC completes primary water supply to ruined refugee camp
 Government unveils rebuilding plan for ruined Palestinian camp
 Ahmed Hassan, “It felt like a kind of resistance to celebrate and dance despite everything"
 Rebuilding camp will be UNRWA’s “largest humanitarian project”
 Five months after displacement, little plan for Nahr al-Bared’s refugees
  See photo slideshow of ruined Nahr al-Bared camp
  See photo slideshow of Palestinian camps in Lebanon
Food aid, rental subsidies under threat

Yet life for these 300 Palestinian families and their thousands of other kinsmen displaced from Nahr al-Bared - some for the third time in their lives - might very soon be getting a lot worse, in large part due to the neglect of the region’s Arab states.

UNRWA is warning that unless its flash appeal for $43 million for emergency humanitarian assistance is met soon the agency will be forced by the end of October to stop distributing food aid to 3,100 families and halt rental subsidies supporting 27,000 Palestinians displaced from Nahr al-Bared.

So far only the USA has come forward with emergency funds, donating $4.3 million for shelter, health and education, part of a total commitment this year of $23.5 million to UNRWA’s reconstruction of Nahr al-Bared.

In June, UNRWA said it needed about $445 million to rebuild the refugee camp - both the so-called New Camp, which sustained heavy damage, and the original, smaller Old Camp which was completely destroyed.

Little Arab financial support for UNRWA

So far UNRWA says it has received just $70 million, 88 percent from Western donations, which also make up 90 percent of funds pledged for short-term relief. To date, no Arab governments have pledged to the long-term reconstruction of the camp, the largest single project in UNRWA's history.

“Sadly this is part of a pattern,” said Leila Shahid, a Palestinian representative at the European Union, in a recent editorial.

“Luxembourg donates more than any Arab government to UNRWA’s regular budget, while Norway gives more to the same budget annually than all Arab governments combined.”

In a bid to highlight the plight of the Palestinians displaced from Nahr al-Bared, UNRWA last week organised a rare tour to areas of the new camp. IRIN's previous visit to the camp was in December. 


Photo: Hugh Macleod/IRIN
Marzouka Mohammed Khadr’s four-year-old daughter sleeps in the cramped UNRWA shelter that has been their home on the edge of Nahr al-Bared since April
Despair, trauma

Though many aspects of normal life, such as vegetable shops, internet cafes and functioning electricity cables, had returned to some areas of the new camp (the old camp remains off limits), the emotional scars among the population appear to run as deep as the physical scars on the camp.

“Depression is increasing among patients,” said Mahmoud Nasser, chief medical officer for the camp, and head of one of two new health clinics opened by UNRWA since November.

“They are more aggressive and some are sinking into despair. We’ve had diabetes patients who stop taking their medicine because they don’t see any point in staying healthy.”

Nasser said his clinic was treating some 180 patients a day, many with skin diseases from the huge dust clouds that blow from the rubble of the camp. UNRWA is now providing 100 percent of medication for chronic diseases, like hypertension and diabetes, rather than its usual commitment of 50 percent.

Salina al-Aynen, coordinator for the Children and Youth Centre (CYC), a kindergarten funded by an Italian non-governmental organisation, and Save the Children, said many of the young children aged 5-8 they host had displayed signs of trauma.

“After the nightmare of Nahr al-Bared we saw kids just walking barefoot through the streets. When they came here all were scared and some would prefer to be alone. But we help them overcome their fear through communal games and celebrating the good things in life.”


Photo: Hugh Macleod/IRIN
Children dance in the sunlight at the Children and Youth Centre, a kindergarten in Nahr al-Bared sponsored by an Italian NGO and Save the Children
Discontent

Abed Najjar of the Nahr al-Bared Palestinian Popular Committee said discontent was growing among Palestinians returning to live in the new camp.

“The army doesn’t care about anyone. People are being harassed at checkpoints daily,” he said. “Reconstruction is very slow. They’ve promised to remove the rubble in the old camp five times now.”

UNRWA says rubble removal in the old camp is due to begin at the end of the first week of October.

hm/at/cb


This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

Share this article

Get the day’s top headlines in your inbox every morning

Starting at just $5 a month, you can become a member of The New Humanitarian and receive our premium newsletter, DAWNS Digest.

DAWNS Digest has been the trusted essential morning read for global aid and foreign policy professionals for more than 10 years.

Government, media, global governance organisations, NGOs, academics, and more subscribe to DAWNS to receive the day’s top global headlines of news and analysis in their inboxes every weekday morning.

It’s the perfect way to start your day.

Become a member of The New Humanitarian today and you’ll automatically be subscribed to DAWNS Digest – free of charge.

Become a member of The New Humanitarian

Support our journalism and become more involved in our community. Help us deliver informative, accessible, independent journalism that you can trust and provides accountability to the millions of people affected by crises worldwide.

Join