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Camp residents doubt long-awaited return to homeland SIDON: Hajj Said Ahmed embodies the plight and subsequent outlook of many Palestinians in Lebanon. He is doubtful about who will succeed the late Palestinian President Yasser Arafat and of any chance of returning to his homeland. Refugees in the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian camp near Sidon agree with Ahmed, and there is little excitement about an expected visit by Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas later in the week. Ahmed, 76, said he was unaware of Abbas' visit. "I came here when I was 20 and now I am an old man walking with a stick. Arafat did not take me back to Palestine, and maybe Abbas will take me back ... to my grave." Abbas, who visited Damascus Monday and Tuesday, will be in Lebanon Wednesday to meet with representatives from the refugee camps - the first such official discussions in years. Fouad Othman, a social welfare official at the camp, said he hopes the visit will focus on the right of return and on the discussion of the refugees' civil and social rights - mainly the right to own property in Lebanon and the reduction of security measures at the camp entrances. The camps are isolated from the outside world by fences and are guarded by the Lebanese Army, which controls all access. Mahmoud Salameh, listening to the radio near a mosque while awaiting noon prayers, said he feared the visit might lead to abandoning the refugees and settling them permanently in Lebanon. "I smell permanent settlement in the visit ... nothing more," Salameh said. As thousands of students flooded out of school, one young man, Wissal Ghandour, urged Abbas to persevere, as Arafat had always done, and fight for the refugees' return. "We need Palestine, we need to sleep on its soil and to pray in Jerusalem," Ghandour said. Fatah Lieutenant Colonel Riad Sarhan called for putting past conflicts - between Palestinians on one hand and Lebanon and Syria on the other - behind them and to stand united against Israeli threats. Osama Attieh, who was busy plastering pictures of Abbas and Arafat on his car, said he supported any Palestinian leader who would "hold on to the right of return and the recovering of Jerusalem." Mohammed Yassin, an official from the Palestinian Liberation Front, which opposed Arafat, said he hoped the PA visit would rectify Lebanese-Palestinian relations and Syrian-Palestinian ties and would work to improve the social situation of the refugees. Read More...
By: Amira Hass
Date: 27/05/2013
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Date: 27/05/2013
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Date: 27/05/2013
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