More than
2,100 Syrian officers have fled to Jordan since the start of the conflict in
their country in 2011, the kingdom's interior minister said in remarks
published on Sunday.
"Jordan is hosting around 2,130 Syrian
officers of different military ranks in a special military complex,"
Hussein Majali told the government-owned Al-Rai daily, according to AFP.
"The kingdom will remain a safe heaven for
everyone but this will not be at the expense of Jordan's safety and stability.
Jordan has the ability to deal with the situation in a balanced manner."
Amman and the
United Nations put the number of refugees in Jordan at more than 500,000,
although the kingdom says 1.2 million Syrians are living in the country,
including those from before the conflict, AFP said.
"If a military strike against Syria takes
place, the biggest threat would be mass exodus to Jordan," Majali said.
"Jordan was prepared to receive additional
150,000 refugees from Syria -- 20,000 in the Zaatari camp and 130,000 in the
Azraq camp."
The northern
Zaatari camp near the border with Syria is home to more than 130,000 refugees.
Over two
million people have fled Syria since the war broke out there in 2011, mostly to
neighbouring Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq.
The United
States and Russia on Saturday concluded three days of talks in Geneva with an
ambitious agreement to dismantle and destroy Syria's chemical weapons arsenal
by mid-2014.
It gives
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a week to hand over details of his regime's
stockpile of the internationally banned arms in order to avert unspecified
sanctions and the threat of US-led military strikes.
Zaman Alwasl
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