Locals hope lucrative trade routes will re-open after seizure of the
Nassib-Jaber border crossing by the Syrian army.
he Nasib-Jaber crossing was previously a bustling free trade zone along
the Jordan-Syria border [Arwa Ibrahim/Al Jazeera]
Jaber-Sarhan, Jordan - Apart from a few cars parked near the deserted
gates, there is hardly any sign of life in what was once one of the busiest
regional trade routes along the Jordan-Syria border.
It was only a few years ago when a steady stream of goods and people
moved through the Nassib-Jaber crossing, a major commercial artery
connecting Syria,, Turkey and Lebanon in the north to Jordan, Egypt and the Gulf in
the south.
Inside its border-straddling free trade zone, transit companies
and industrialists were allowed to set up shop under favourable terms.
A wide array of restaurants and shops meanwhile welcomed merchants
and drivers making brief stops before loading their cargo onto one of the
hundreds of trucks passing through the border daily.
But Syria's devastating war put an end to this bustling activity. In
2015, the takeover of the crossing by rebels prompted Jordan to shut it down,
refusing to deal with a non-state actor. Amman sealed the border
altogether a year later after a deadly car bomb attack at an army post near
Rukban camp.
This shutdown, however, might soon be reversed.
On June 19, Syrian government troops backed by Russian air power
launched a fierce offensive in the southwestern province of Deraa with the aim
of re-taking an area held by rebels for several years. After more than two
weeks of being battered, the opposition fighters eventually reached a ceasefire
agreement with the government on Friday.
Under the deal, the rebels agreed to give up the crossing and hand over
their heavy weapons, allowing the Russian military police to deploy along the Jordanian
border.
Hours after the deal was struck, Syrian forces reached the border crossing for the first time in years and
re-took control.
In Jordan, a country bogged down by persisting financial woes and the
influx of hundreds of thousands of refugees since the start of the Syrian war in
2011, the seizure raised hopes, especially among residents in northern
towns, that the border crossing will re-open soon and boost the
country's flailing economy by allowing commerce to flow once again.
"People here hope the borders would re-open," Ameen
al-Harfoshy, a taxi driver in the Jaber-Sarhan area, told Al Jazeera.
"When there was land shipping and taxis [moving back-and-forth],
everyone was working and making money. It [the crossing] was this village's
source of income."
A lifeline for Jordan
Before the war, Jordan’s Investment 1.5 bn worth of trade
every year. By 2014 that sum had dropped to $400m, and now amounts to zero.
In 2016, Jordan received a $723m loan from the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and put in place a plan to bring down its high debt level.
Amid a growing anger over austerity measures, the rising cost of living
and unemployment, the economy has been further strained by the border closure,
which has resulted in long delays in shipping and added custom duties.
"Shipping and trading routes have had to change, whereby cargo -
which used to be transported by land - is being transported by sea," Nadia
Shahin, general manager of Amin Kawar Shipping, Jordan's leading shipping
provider, told Al Jazeera.
"We've lost our income", merchants near the border say
[Muhammad Hamed/Reuters]
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"[Because of the closures], cargo [traditionally] going through
Nassib has been forced to go by sea, which has added major financial burdens
because of the extra costs and considerable extra time," she said, adding
that the port of Aqaba has been used as an alternative shipping route.
Salameh Darawi, an economic analyst, said the geopolitical and military
developments of recent years hurt Jordan's trade with neighbouring Syria,
resulting in both countries losing much-needed revenue.
"The crossings were used for tourism between Jordan to Syria, as
well of a lot of investment back-and-forth," said Darawi.
"In the years before the war, trade with Syria was about $500m
annually. The closure of the crossing has lost them that."
'We can't host more'
One of the world's top refugee-hosting countries relative to its size,
Jordan is home to about 650,000 Syrian refugees, according to the UN. The
Jordanian government estimates the figure is double that.
Before Friday's ceasefire deal, which saw most of the
60,000 fleeing
Ayman Safadi, Jordan's foreign minister, wrote last month on Twitter
that Jordan is "at capacity... we can't host more”.
According to Labib Kamhawi, a Jordanian political analyst, the influx
of refugees has aggravated Jordan's economic problems and informed
Amman's decision to keep its borders shut.
"We have meagre resources and the fact that the government is
almost bankrupt means that it cannot invest into developing the
infrastructure," said Kamhawi.
"Jordanians have to share this weak infrastructure with hundreds
of thousands of refugees," he added.
'We've lost our income'
While Jordan's economy as a whole has been affected by the closure, the
country's northern towns and villages have been hit the hardest, residents say.
"We've lost our income," Hajj Nader, the owner of a travel
company in Jordan's Zarqa province, which employed hundreds of drivers
transporting people and cargo along the route, told Al Jazeera.
"We used to do 1,200 journey every day. There hasn't been a single
one since [the borders were closed]."
The closure has also meant a complete shutdown
for the free trade zone.
"Restaurants and coffee shops here [in the free trade zone] ...
are now all closed," al-Harfoshy, the taxi driver in Jaber-Sarhan, told Al
Jazeera. "All these people [who worked there] are now unemployed and just
sitting at home."
Even though many locals are optimistic that the border crossing will
re-open soon, it is difficult to say when that will happen
"Now that the Syrian government has taken over the crossing, we
hope it will be reopened and cars will go back to moving between those areas
again," said Nader.
"We can return to having an income and our economy and households
will flourish again."

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