Since the civil war broke out in March 2011, an estimated 11 million Syrians evacuated their homes. Now, in the sixth year of war, 13.5 million people in the country need humanitarian assistance. Most of the people who escaped conflict sought exile in neighboring countries and Syria. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 8 million people fled to Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Iraq, of which 6 million evacuated in Syria. At the same time, about 1 million people applied for exile in Europe. Sweden with Germany and 100,000 Sweden with over 300,000 cumulative applications is the main recipient of the EU.
The website briefly explains the impact of this refugee crisis on the EU. This is a project of Immigration Policy Center of Florence University in Europe. This site provides important data on conflict and combines a series of studies conducted by local researchers on behalf of MPC. The project began when the group of journalists started working closely with these local researchers with the support of MPC in January 2013. Its main purpose is to describe the most serious refugee crisis that affects the region for many years.
This website reviews the role and host area of the EU as a provider of humanitarian aid. Although the EU is certainly making a great contribution to humanitarian aid in this region, the amount of donation from each of the 28 member countries varies widely. Currently, according to estimates of UNHCR, 70% of the funds are still short. To date, the EU has accepted the majority of Syrians applying asylum, but has handled a relatively small number of applications. Despite the rapid increase in 2015, these growth rates were less than 10% of the total number of displaced Syrians. In contrast, the influx of refugees is a major issue for Syrian neighboring countries and has a major impact on the stability of the entire region. We hope that this website is a way to more easily understand this immigration crisis.
1) The civil war in Iraq between Iraq and the Kurds could cause another refugee crisis. KRG is concerned about more than 200,000 Syrian refugees. It is estimated that 97% of Iraqi Syrian refugees live in Kurdistan. In order to take care of these refugees, the KRG constructed seven permanent camps and three transition camps. Four more camps are under construction, but the future of these facilities is currently being questioned quite doubly. Where are the refugees going when the Kurds can no longer see them? It is doubtful that EU countries will accept more refugees. So far, the Trump regime has not helped this problem. This is another disaster wait
Currently there are more than 4 million Syrian refugees and the Syrian crisis is the largest in the world today. In the face of such serious humanitarian suffering, the moral requirement for accepting more Syrian refugees is clear. However, one question to be asked is: Another question: Why Syria? It is important to consider the role of Syria and USRAP in the global refugee crisis. At the end of 2014, UNHCR estimated that 19.5 million refugees around the world are evacuating (38.2 million IDPs and 1.8 million asylum seekers). Although Syrians are the largest group, there are 2.5 million Afghans and 1.1 million Somali refugees. Many of these refugees have been waiting for decades to solve the evacuation problem, and it is almost impossible to achieve a sustainable return to "home". The same can be said for refugees from other crises, such as Iraqis, Eritreans, Congolese, Burundians, Burmese.
Lebanon has become one of the main places for resettlement of Syrian refugees. Amnesty International records that one million Syrian refugees live in Lebanon and an estimated 30% of Syrian refugees are not yet registered in any UN agencies or offices and have not been registered yet . Economically, unmarried girls are often considered to be a burden and also cause of anxiety. Married, these responsibilities are transferred directly to your husband. In an interview with the Syrian refugees in the Bekaya Valley, CARE International reported that unmarried girls "reported that they were aware of" additional rewarding burden and concern for their so-called "honor" "family rejection" #:.