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  You are here: Home Where UNRWA works Syria Syria camp profiles Khan Dunoun refugee camp



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Khan Dunoun refugee camp


Tags: Khan Dunoun | poverty | Syria

Khan Dunoun camp is near the ruins of Khan Dunoun, which was built several centuries ago to give overnight accommodation to trading caravans on the ancient route between Jerusalem and Constantinople (modern day Istanbul).

Boys on street corner

In 1948, the ruins provided shelter for refugees from villages in northern Palestine.

The camp, which is 23km south of Damascus, was officially established in 1950-1951 on an area of 0.03 square kilometres.

Khan Dunoun is one of the poorest camps in Syria. Most refugees are farm workers on Syrian-owned lands; others are wage labourers, while a few commute to industrial plants.

Many families have difficulty in meeting even their most basic needs. The pressure on young people to leave school early to contribute to the family income means a generally low level of education in the camp. This is especially true of women, who find jobs as house cleaners or workers in clothing factories.

There is a relatively high incidence of illnesses associated with poor environmental health conditions, and a high incidence of inherited diseases such as thalassaemia and sickle-cell anaemia. This is difficult to combat because in such a poor community marriage between first cousins is common and marriages outside the extended family are unaffordable for many.

A lack of proper sanitation facilities is the most pressing problem in the camp. Wells, dug without official permission, have dried up due to lack of rain and constant over-exploitation of the ground water. Many refugees now buy water from mobile tankers operating in the area, but the water is not always safe for human consumption.

The camp also lacks a sewerage system and shelters only have pit latrines. The proximity of pit latrines to water wells poses a major health hazard for camp residents as well as for neighbouring villages. A camp infrastructure improvement project has installed water and sewage networks, roads, water and wastewater systems.

Statistics

  • More than 10,000 registered refugees
  • Four double-shift schools
  • One food distribution centre
  • One health centre
  • One community centre
  • Demographic profile:
    Graph of Khan Dunoun demographic profile

Programmes in the camp

Major problems

  • Unpaved roads
  • Water problems
  • Overcrowded households
  • High school drop-out rate
  • Health problems because of intermarriage.








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