ANJAR, LEBANON // Snow fell Wednesday across the Middle East as a powerful winter storm swept through the region, forcing Syrians who have fled their country’s civil war to huddle for warmth in refugee camps.
The storm, called Huda, dumped rain and hail on Lebanon’s coast and heavy snows in the mountains and central Bekaa Valley, where petrol stations, banks, schools and most shops closed.
While the storm disrupted life for everyone, it proved particularly trying for the hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees who live in tents and makeshift shelters in the Bekaa.
Near the town of Anjar, men used brooms to try to clear the heavy snow from the tops of refugee tents, fearing the weight might cause the shelters to collapse. Inside the tents, refugees could be seen huddling around the wood burning stoves to try to keep warm.
Elsewhere, Palestinian authorities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip declared a state of emergency over the storm. An 8-month-old infant in the Tulkarem refugee camp died in a fire caused by a heating stove, Palestinian civil defense ministry spokesman Loae Bani Odeh said.
In Syria, snow blanketed Qassioun Mountain, which overlooks Damascus. The snowfall also brought traffic to a near standstill in the capital, Damascus, and prompted the Education Ministry to shutter school and universities for two days.
* Associated Press

