Dbayeh camp is a Palestinian refugee camp located next to Dbayeh, 12 kilometers east of the city of Beirut on a hill overlooking the highway connecting Beirut and Tripoli.[1]
The camp was established in 1956 with the aim of sheltering Palestinian refugees who came from the Galilee area in northern Palestine, especially from Al-Bassa, and some families from Kfar Baram, Iqrit, Haifa and Acre, most of whom are Christians. There are currently more than 4,000 refugees living in the camp.
Because of its strategic location, the camp suffered a lot of violence during the Lebanese Civil War. 70 of the people of the camp were executed in 1976 by the Phalange Party and its associates. In 1990, a quarter of its homes were destroyed or severely damaged while more than 100 families living in it, most of them Christian Palestinian refugees, were displaced. It is the only remaining Palestinian refugee camp in the eastern suburbs of Beirut. The camp's infrastructure is currently undergoing extensive rehabilitation work.
References
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Gaza Strip 518,000 UNRWA refugees | West Bank 188,150 UNRWA refugees | Syria 319,958 UNRWA refugees | Lebanon 188,850 UNRWA refugees | Jordan 355,500 UNRWA refugees | |
Aqabat Jaber | 6,400 |
Ein as-Sultan | 1,900 |
Far'a | 7,600 |
Fawwar | 8,000 |
Jalazone | 11,000 |
Qalandia | 11,000 |
Am'ari | 10,500 |
Deir 'Ammar | 2,400 |
Dheisheh | 13,000 |
Aida | 4,700 |
Al-Arroub | 10,400 |
Askar | 15,900 |
Balata | 23,600 |
'Azza (Beit Jibrin) | 1,000 |
Ein Beit al-Ma' (Camp No. 1) | 6,750 |
Tulkarm | 18,000 |
Nur Shams | 9,000 |
Jenin | 16,000 |
Shu'fat | 11,000 |
Silwad |
Birzeit |
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Sabinah | 22,600 |
Khan al-Shih | 20,000 |
Nayrab | 20,500 |
Homs | 22,000 |
Jaramana | 18,658 |
Daraa | 10,000 |
Hama | 8,000 |
Khan Danoun | 10,000 |
Qabr Essit | 23,700 |
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Unofficial camps |
Ein Al-Tal | 6,000 |
Latakia | 10,000 |
Yarmouk | 148,500 |
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Bourj el-Barajneh | 17,945 |
Ain al-Hilweh | 54,116 |
El Buss | 11,254 |
Nahr al-Bared | 5,857 |
Shatila | 9,842 |
Wavel | 8,806 |
Mar Elias | 662 |
Mieh Mieh | 5,250 |
Beddawi | 16,500 |
Burj el-Shamali | 22,789 |
| 4,351 |
Rashidieh | 31,478 |
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Former camps |
Tel al-Zaatar | ? |
Nabatieh | ? |
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Zarqa | 20,000 |
Jabal el-Hussein | 29,000 |
Amman New (Wihdat) | 51,500 |
Souf | 20,000 |
Baqa'a | 104,000 |
Husn (Martyr Azmi el-Mufti camp) | 22,000 |
Irbid | 25,000 |
Jerash | 24,000 |
Marka | 53,000 |
Talbieh | 8,000 |
Al-Hassan | ? |
Madaba | ? |
Sokhna | ? |
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References
- ^ "Camp Profiles". unrwa.org. United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
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