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A senior Russian official has urged Syrian refugees to return to their home country where he said they will face no threat from President Bashar Assad’s regime or the Syrian security apparatus.

Alexander Lavrentyev, Russia’s Syria envoy, also said the Syrian regime was not able to provide much financial help to returnees and urged foreign donors to provide assistance, saying the issue should not be politicized.

The UN says that conditions for refugees to return to Syria are not yet fulfilled, more than seven years into a conflict that has killed hundreds of thousands of people since spiralling out of an uprising against Assad’s rule.

While some refugees are trickling back, many Syrians who fled the country fear persecution by the Assad government.

Russia, whose military has helped Assad defeat insurgents across much of Syria, last week declared it had set up a refugee center in Syria to help refugees return.

Lavrentyev, who met Assad in Damascus on Wednesday, said people were returning to Syria every day.

“People understand that there is no threat from the government and from the governmental security apparatus and they are returning to their homes, to their territories



which are now under the control of the government,” he said during a visit to Lebanon.

Some 5.6 million Syrians are registered as refugees in the region, about 1 million of them in Lebanon, where Lavrentyev, held talks with President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Thursday.

“People are returning,” he said. “It is a good sign, and it is a good signal for all those refugees who are still in Lebanon, in Jordan, in Turkey, that it is time to think it over, and to decide to return to their home.”

The Syrian regime was “really willing to accept all those who want to come back to their homes,” he added.

In April, a Syria conference hosted by the EU and co-chaired by the UN said conditions for returning were not yet fulfilled, and that present conditions were not conducive for voluntary repatriation in safety and with dignity.

Assad has recovered control of most of Syria in the past few years. Much of the north and a large part of the east remains outside his control, however. The Syrian war is estimated to have killed hundreds of thousands of people.

Western states have said they will not help rebuild Syria until a negotiated political transition is under way.
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