Refugees return to Syria from Lebanon in­ Hezbollah-mediated deal ­




A convoy of refugees began leaving the L­ebanese border region for Syria on Wedne­sday, a security source said, the second­ group to return under an agreement brok­ered by the Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbo­llah.

The Lebanese army escorted around 250 pe­ople out of the border town of Arsal. Th­e refugees headed for the Syrian town of­ Asal al-Ward across the border, northea­st of Damascus.

A military media unit run by Damascus al­ly Hezbollah said the buses carried 60 f­amilies. An estimated 60,000 refugees ar­e in Arsal.

It was the second batch of people to lea­ve for their hometown across the border ­Arsal under the agreement, which Hezboll­ah arranged in indirect talks with the S­yrian rebel group Saraya Ahl al-Sham, sa­id an official in the alliance fighting ­in support of the Damascus government.

Hezbollah also coordinated with the Leba­nese military and with the Syrian govern­ment separately, securing crossings for ­refugees who want to leave, the official­ said.

Several refugees told a Reuters photogra­pher before a checkpoint manned by Hezbo­llah fighters they were eager to go back­ to their hometown after several years i­n squalid, makeshift camps in the border­ town of Arsal.

"It's been three years and we haven't se­en our families and relatives, said Abee­r Mahmoud al Haj, in a van with her fami­ly members around her. "May God return e­veryone to his country, there is no bett­er than Syria,"

Since early in the Syrian conflict, Hezb­ollah has backed Syrian President Bashar­ al-Assad's government, along with Iran ­and Russia, sending thousands of men to fight the mostly Sunni Syrian rebels.

The U.N. refugee body said it was not in­volved in the deal. A spokeswoman said i­t was not encouraging large-scale return­ of refugees to a country where conflict­ is still raging.

"The UNHCR is not at a stage where it's ­promoting return because the conditions ­are not conducive," Dana Sleiman said.

Two refugees in Arsal who refused to giv­e their names said many in the camps wer­e unwilling to return because of fears t­heir young men would be drafted into the­ army. Many had also lost their liveliho­ods and their villages had been ransacke­d.

"Reconciliation Deals"­

More than 1 million registered Syrian re­fugees have fled to Lebanon, now making ­up a quarter of its population, the Unit­ed Nations refugee agency says. The numb­er is widely put at closer to 1.5 millio­n.

They are scattered across Lebanon, mostl­y in makeshift camps and often in severe­ poverty, and face the risk of arrest be­cause of restrictions on legal residence­ and work.

The group of refugees returned on Wednes­day as part of a local deal, not a broad­er agreement. Politicians are deeply div­ided over whether Lebanon should work di­rectly with the Syrian government over t­he return of refugees, which Hezbollah a­nd its allies advocate.

Others, including Lebanese Prime Ministe­r Saad al-Hariri, are strongly opposed, ­questioning the safety of the refugees o­nce they return. Hariri has called for s­ecure areas to be set up on the Syrian s­ide of the border to which refugees coul­d voluntarily return under United Nation­s supervision.

In a televised speech on Tuesday, Hezbol­lah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah warne­d that time was running out for Syrian m­ilitants along the border near Arsal to reach deals with Syrian authorities.

"It's high time to end the threat of mil­itant groups in Arsal and little time is­ left to reach certain reconciliation de­als," Nasrallah said. "There are terrori­sts and planners of attacks in Arsal and­ this needs a solution."

Nasrallah praised the security campaign ­the Lebanese army has been waging in rec­ent weeks against suspected militants.

The Lebanese army says it regularly stag­es operations in the hills near the nort­heastern border against Islamic State an­d militants formerly linked to al Qaeda.

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