وكالة قاسيون للأنباء
  • الجمعة, 11 أكتوبر - 2024
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A report reveals the continuation of the "looting" in the "Yarmouk" camp in Damascus

Local sources revealed the continuation of looting and theft of civilian homes and property in the "Yarmouk camp" in Damascus to this day, by some thieves and civilians from the areas and towns adjacent to the camp, despite the return of about 2,000 families from its residents.

According to a report issued by the Action Group for the Palestinians of Syria, a group of unidentified thieves stole the furniture of a Palestinian refugee's house, who was working to rehabilitate his house and equip it with some furniture in order to return to it, but when he returned to his house, he did not visit it. For a week because of his busyness, he found it stolen (bed) empty without any piece of furniture.

She explained that the people of the camp demanded all the concerned and competent authorities to find radical solutions to these abuses and violations committed by the thieves known as Al-Afaishah, after matters reached the point of setting fire to a house belonging to one of the camp residents.

She added that the people of the camp held the Assad regime and its authorities and the Palestinian militias affiliated with the Assad regime responsible for the deteriorating security conditions inside the camp’s neighborhoods, which contributed greatly to the growing influence of Al-Afisheh, noting that the continuation of this dangerous phenomenon is an attempt to prevent the people from staying inside the camp, and that it paints a negative image of those He thinks of going back to his home in the camp.

The camp's residents called on the Assad regime, the concerned authorities, the Palestine Liberation Organization and UNRWA to work on rehabilitating the camp's infrastructure, in order to speed up their return to their homes as soon as possible.

It is worth noting that the displaced from Yarmouk camp outside the camp are living in difficult humanitarian and living conditions, due to the high prices and the high rent of houses, which exhausted them and contributed to doubling their suffering.