
A snowplow opens a road in the north Lebanon village of Turza, in the district of Bsharri
BEIRUT (AP) — A snowstorm engulfed Lebanon on the first day of the new year, cutting off mountain roads, isolating villages and worsening living conditions for tens of thousands of Syrian refugees.
Many refugees, living in tents and huts in the eastern Bekaa Valley, only came briefly out of their shelters on Friday to clear the snow so their dwellings would not collaps
Elsewhere, Syrian children were seen tossing snowballs at one another and playing in the snow. A child ran around in flip-flops, unfazed by the cold.
In the eastern town of Al-Marj near the Syrian border, the refugees said their biggest worry was the water, from rain or snow, leaking into the tents.
"We don’t know when the tent will collapse on us," said a Syrian woman, who identified herself as Um Abdou. "When it’s windy, we cannot sleep because we are scared that the tent will be blown away."