1 500 Syrian refugees detained in Egypt

In this November 6, 2013 photo, a Syrian refugee girl stands in front of a shelter tent, at Zaatari Refugee Camp, in Mafraq, Jordan.

In this November 6, 2013 photo, a Syrian refugee girl stands in front of a shelter tent, at Zaatari Refugee Camp, in Mafraq, Jordan.

Published Nov 11, 2013

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Cairo - Egypt detained more than 1 500 refugees from Syria, including Palestinians and 250 children, before forcing most to leave the country, Human Rights Watch said in a report on Monday.

The New York-based watchdog said the refugees were detained for weeks and even months, and that some of the children were only two months old.

HRW said that most of the refugees who were arrested had been trying to “migrate to Europe on smugglers' boat.”

Palestinians fleeing war-hit Syria were especially targeted, HRW said.

It accused Egyptian authorities of preventing them “from seeking protection” from the UN refugee agency UNHCR and telling them to leave or face “indefinite detention”.

“Egyptian authorities tell detained Palestinians that their only alternative to indefinite detention is to go to Lebanon, where they are only permitted to legally enter on a 48-hour transit visa, or to return to war-torn Syria,” it said.

“Egypt is leaving hundreds of Palestinians from Syria with no protection from Syria's killing fields except indefinite detention in miserable conditions,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director.

“Egypt should immediately release those being held and allow UNHCR to give them the protection they are due under international law.”

HRW says about 300 refugees from Syria, almost two thirds of them Palestinians, are still behind bars and demanded that Egypt hold accountable the security officials who ordered their detention.

The Egyptian government says about 300 000 Syrian refugees are in the country, and 5 000-6 000 Palestinian refugees from Syria have also sought refuge according to UN figures.

Egypt has cracked down on refugees following the July ouster by the military of president Mohamed Morsi, amid media accusations they supported the Islamist leader.

In October Cairo authorities denied it was mistreating Syrian refugees after Amnesty International accused Egypt of unlawfully detaining and deporting hundreds of them.

Sapa-AFP

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