Since the fall of Bashar Assad’s government in December, some 850,000 Syrian refugees have returned home from neighboring countries and the figure could reach 1 million in the coming weeks, a top official with the U.N. refugee agency said Monday.
According to Kelly T. Clements, deputy high commissioner of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, about 1.7 million people who were internally displaced during the 14-year-old conflict have returned to their communities as the interim central government
now controls large parts of Syria.
“It’s a dynamic period. It’s an opportunity where we could see potentially solutions for the largest global displacements that we have seen in the last 14 years,” said Clements, who has been in Syria for three days.
Syria’s conflict, which began in March 2011, has killed nearly half a million people and displaced half the country’s pre-war population of 23 million. More than 5 million Syrians fled the country as refugees, most of them to neighboring countries