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Tom Fletcher

Tom Fletcher

Former British Ambassador to Lebanon

Part of UK in Lebanon

15th March 2013 Beirut, Lebanon

Syrian uprising two years on

Today marks the second anniversary of the Syrian uprising. Lebanon now hosts almost 400,000 registered Syrian refugees, but the real number of Syrians here is over 1m. Imagine the impact of 15m refugees in the UK.

Lebanon, lashed to Syria by history and geography, has responded with extraordinary generosity. With camps avoided for political reasons, it is families and communities who have shouldered the burden. Local schools and hospitals play their part – I met one teacher last week whose class has swelled from 16 to 38.

Parts of the international community have tried to help, and it is heartening to see British aid making a difference, in support of the UN effort. We are working flat out with the government, other donors, and NGOs. But the honest reality is that we are barely scratching the surface. Shamefully, most pledges made at the Kuwait conference have yet to materialise. The system cannot cope.

Syria contagion also hits Lebanon in other ways. Violence has spilled over the borders, and some have sought to ignite clashes in the Palestinian camps or on the fault lines between Sunni and Shia communities. Until now, the main columns of Lebanese society – the army, banks and an elastic political system – are proving more resilient than many predicted. After all, the Lebanese know better than anyone both the depth of Syrian regime brutality and the cost of division. But again, the strain is proving hard to bear. Britain is helping through increased support for the army, through projects in the Palestinian camps, and an active role in the relentless round of politics required to maintain consensus on Lebanese stability. The longer the Syria crisis lasts, the harder it will be to find thumbs for all the holes in the dyke.

Two years on, it is all too easy to feel ground down. Our Syria experts send daily updates cataloguing the relentless numbers: death, torture, displacement. The Save the Children report is a powerful reminder of the daily cost of the conflict. The stories of many we have met are seared on our consciousness. When diplomatic initiatives fall again and again on stony ground – and the Security Council has comprehensively failed the Syrians and Palestinians here in Lebanon – we get frustrated and despondent. But we are no less determined to end this crisis than we were two years ago. And we are spurred on by that most undiplomatic of characteristics: rage.

4 comments on “Syrian uprising two years on

  1. The need of the hour is to find an AMICABLE solution to the situation in SYRIA !

    Different communities live in Syria! Syria is HOLY to both Christianity and Islam. No true religion puts bloodshed over humanity!

    International RELATIONS should bolster peace and amicable resolutions when threat or actual bloodshed and loss of lives and economy take place!

    I trust the UK to find a PEACEFUL solution to the Problems facing the people of both SYRIA and LEBANON.

    -Z C Philips
    Lib Dems ( CROYDON, LONDON)

  2. This is the tip of the iceberg; it seems that the Syrian issue is not going away anytime soon, and the longer it drags the worse things are going to be in Lebanon, and you can already feel the effects.

    What should take place almost immediately is ceasefire in Syria, and I would have hoped the UK would play a leading role in this and get both sides in Syria to be responsible and talk, plan and above all stop taking the region into the unknown.

    we all need to face facts, the longer the syrian civil war continues the more likely Lebanon will be dragged into it. Act now.

    1. Thank you. Our top priority is to get a political process started. It is hugely frustrating that it has not yet proved possible. We will keep trying.

Comments are closed.

About Tom Fletcher

Tom Fletcher was appointed Her Majesty’s Ambassador to the Lebanese Republic in August 2011. Tom was born in Kent, and studied at Harvey Grammar School (Folkestone) and Oxford University (Hertford…

Tom Fletcher was appointed Her Majesty’s Ambassador to the Lebanese Republic in August 2011.

Tom was born in Kent, and studied at Harvey Grammar School (Folkestone) and Oxford University (Hertford College), graduating with a First class degree in Modern History. He has an MA in Modern History, and is a Senior Associate Member of St Anthony’s College for International Studies, Oxford.

He is married to Louise Fletcher and they have two sons, Charles (born 2006) and Theodor (born 2011). Tom enjoys political history, cricket (Strollers CC), and mountains, and is the co-founder of 2020 (a progressive think tank).

Tom was awarded the Companion of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the 2011 New Year’s Honours, for services to the Prime Minister.