The shocking story of how one man went from a wealthy business owner to refugee.
Khaled lives in western Sydney with his wife Rhamia and their six children. He’s just one of around 500 Syrian refugees who’ve started a new life in Australia, after he and his family were granted refugee protection by the UNHCR at a camp in Lebanon. In his own words, this is his story…
I was a businessman in Syria; I had five companies, including a car and freight company and a bakery for tourists. I also had a farm where we raised cattle and purebred horses.
I was wealthy there and life was very good.
In 2010 the government launched a crackdown on dissent. Critics, human rights defenders, alleged opponents of the government and others were detained, often for prolonged periods; some were sentenced to prison terms after unfair trials.
Read more: Syria: Three years of conflict.
The trouble began in 2010 when I was imprisoned without charge for around 11 months. I was accused by a military officer of obtaining ‘illegal money’ but was released when the prison ran out of room.
Not long after my release from prison I was kidnapped by a gang. They were after every single person who was rich and wealthy; they wanted all of these people who had factories, money, assets.
They kept me for two months. I was tortured: slashed repeatedly with a knife. I saw four friends murdered in front of me.
They demanded ransom money from my wife, so she sold our house and land in order to pay it.
Finally, one month after the start of the conflict in 2011, they released me and threw me in a rubbish bin, naked and on the verge of death on the main street. As you can imagine for someone who was wealthy and suddenly I had nothing at all, as naked as a baby; I was humiliated.