YAMMOUNEH, Lebanon: A fire ripped through a refugee camp in Lebanon on Monday killing two Syrians, including a boy, and burning nearly two dozen tents, a local official said.
Around 1.5 million Syrians have sought shelter in Lebanon from the seven-year civil war raging next door, with many living in camps in the Bekaa Valley in the east of the country.
The fire in the northeastern town of Yammouneh early Monday “killed a 46-year-old man as well as a boy aged seven or eight,” said Deputy Mayor Hussein Shreif.
It “burnt down 23 of 70 tents in the camp,” he said, adding it was not immediately clear what started the fire. But after the initial spark, “the explosion of a fuel container in one of the tents caused the fire to spread,” he said.
Security forces and a UN team were dispatched to the area of the camp, he said.
One of the refugees said: “At 3 a.m., we heard screaming. Then we saw flames (spreading) and we couldn’t put them out.”
An AFP photographer saw people milling amid the cinders of former tents, nothing remaining of them but a few metal poles.
Near a field of red earth, a young girl in a green hoodie picked through a pile of clothes that had survived the fire.
Lebanon’s national news agency, NNA, said “civil defense put out the fire with difficulty due to the low visibility, thick fog and smoke.”
Fires have often erupted in Syrian refugee camps, where many depend on international aid for their survival.
Security forces also regularly sweep down on the informal settlements.
On Wednesday, further to the east in the area of Arsal, the army detained hundreds of Syrians, including over no or expired identity documents.
Since the start of the year, thousands of Syrians have gone home to their country, according to an AFP tally, in returns coordinated between the authorities in Beirut and Damascus.
Lebanese authorities waive late fines for those whose residency papers have expired if they agree to return to Syria.
The Syrian conflict has killed more than 360,000 people and forced millions from their homes since it started with the brutal repression of anti-government protests in 2011