Lebanon not a country for 'permanent asylum': Salam to the UN
Written by Malek

By Daily Star Lebanon

BEIRUT: Prime Minister Tammam Salam Thursday warned the international community against looking to Lebanon as a place of “permanent asylum” for Syrian refugees.

"We want to stress on the temporary nature of Syrian presence in Lebanon. ... [Lebanon] isn't a country for permanent asylum, and can only be perceived as a final country for settlement by the Lebanese themselves," Salam said, addressing the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

"We will continue to welcome Syrian refugees as long as their lives are still under threat ... We are doing what we can but we have very limited resources," he said.

Salam had stressed earlier in the day that priority should go toward relocating Syrian refugees to their country instead of "naturalizing" them.

"We refuse to naturalize refugees in Lebanon because our priority is to relocate them to their country of origin," Salam told Al Arabiya during an interview.

The prime minister also called on international organizations to provide Lebanon with adequate aid to help manage the 1.5 million Syrian refugees in the country.

"Infrastructure-related aid that coming in from the outside has been limited and doesn't suffice in allowing us to deal with the refugee crisis," he said.

On Monday, the prime minister had addressed a U.N. summit on refugees and migrants on the sidelines of the assembly, calling on the international community to set up a detailed road map to ensure the safe return of Syrian refugees in Lebanon to their homeland.

Just over 1 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon are registered with the U.N., but the actual number is believed to be much higher. The Lebanese government has repeatedly complained that aid pledges to help Lebanon cope with Syrian refugees have not been fulfilled by donor countries.

The prime minister also reminded the U.N. General Assembly that Lebanon is still "under the threat" of terrorism and that facing terrorism requires "immense efforts."

"Lebanon is currently engaged in an open war against terrorism that has cost [the country] both civilian and military lives over the years," he said.