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Syrian refugees in Europe face uncertainty after Assad's sudden departure

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Syrian presidentʼs unexpected exile to Russia puts thousands of EU asylum cases on pause. Many refugees who built new lives in Europe over the last decade now worry about forced returns

The sudden fall of Syriaʼs government has created a new-found worry for refugees living in Europe. After rebels took over Damascus this week forcing president Bashar al-Assad into Russian exile‚ many EU countries put Syrian asylum cases on-hold

Najem al-Moussa a former lawyer now working as a cook in Athens feels torn about the news: his tiny flatʼs TV shows images of change in his homeland but his thoughts are with his familys future here. “I consider my life to be here; not just me but my children“ he says while his wife Bushra al-Bukaai nods in agreement

Their story started roughly 9 years ago when they left Damascus spending all savings on a two-year trip through several countries (including Sudan Iran and Turkey) before reaching Greece. Today their five kids speak perfect Greek but barely know their parents native Arabic

The numbers tell a bigger story: Syrian asylum requests in EU peaked around 2015-16 with more than 330‚000 applications yearly; after dropping for a while they went up again between 2020-23. Now thousands of cases are frozen as countries re-think their policies

In Germany Hasan Alzagher a 32-year old vet who left Raqqa about 6 years ago faces similar issues. His pending asylum case got stopped mid-process: “Its mentally devastating to think about returning when youʼve already started building a new life here‚“ he explains while taking a break from his German-language class

The situation shows two different responses to Assads exit:

  • Many Syrians in Turkey and Lebanon rush back home
  • Refugees in EU prefer staying in their new countries
  • Legal experts question delays in processing cases

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