UN: 100,000 Syrian Refugees In Lebanon
The UN refugee agency says there are now more than 100,000 Syrian refugees in Lebanon. 
 Agency spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said that at least 101,283 Syrian  refugees are registered in Lebanon, joining the more than 105,000  registered in Jordan and 101,000 in Turkey.
 There are also more than 42,000 Syrian refugees in Iraq.
 Fleming called for international support for countries hosting these  refugees, saying, "These nations should not be expected to bear the  burden alone."
 In Jordan, where authorities claim there are more than 200,000 Syrian  refugees, a group of angry Syrians burned some 20 tents on October 22 to  protest poor living conditions.
 A local charity organization helping the refugees said the incident  occurred at the Zaatari desert refugee camp in northern Jordan.
 Meanwhile, an antiaircraft shell fired from Syria reportedly hit a health center inside Turkey.
 There are no immediate reports of injuries.
 Turkish media said the shell landed in the Reyhanli district of Turkey's Hatay Province.
 Tension between the two neighbors has escalated since October 3, when a  shell struck a Turkish border town, killing five civilians.
 Turkey has bolstered its military presence along its 900-kilometer  border with Syria. Turkish artillery has been responding to repeated  mortar and shelling from Syria.
	
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