Refugees
in sentence
2286 examples of Refugees in a sentence
He called immigrants and
refugees
criminals and rapists (even though crime rates among
refugees
in Germany are far lower than among “natives”).
Turkey has now taken in some three million Syrian
refugees
since the beginning of the conflict.
Several hundred people were killed, entire neighborhoods were destroyed, and an estimated 400,000 people were made into
refugees.
Unlike his neighbors, he opened the border to desperate refugees, mostly women, children, and the elderly.
The
refugees
were Uzbeks, and Karimov had good reason to fear the possibility of a much bigger crisis within Uzbekistan, which is also home to many Tajiks, Kyrgyz, and of course millions of Uzbeks who might have been inflamed by the persecution of their ethnic kin in Kyrgyzstan.
Third, we must provide immigration systems with the resources needed to process asylum claims quickly, fairly, and openly, so that
refugees
are protected and safely resettled.
In reality, 70% of
refugees
seek protection in developing countries.
By the end of this year, it will likely harbor close to two million refugees, driven from their homes by violent conflict in neighboring Syria and elsewhere.
When potential
refugees
are blocked by offshore barriers, detained for excessive periods in unsatisfactory conditions, or refused entry because of restrictive legal interpretations, the protection of international law is lost.
With
refugees
spending more than ten years away from home, on average, this neglect cannot be allowed to continue.
He is a skilled rabble-rouser, whose inflammatory rhetoric against immigrants and
refugees
– “We’re going to build that wall high and we’re going to build it tall!”– drives the crowds at Trump rallies into a frenzy.
What is odd about Miller, among other things, is the seeming clash between his views on immigrants, refugees, and minorities and his personal background.
Turkey currently provides safe haven to more
refugees
than any other country in the world.
Turkey also shelters tens of thousands of
refugees
from other conflict-ridden countries, including Afghanistan and Iraq.
Some Western countries have been generous in accommodating
refugees
from these conflicts.
But, despite being poorer, Turkey has still taken in more than twice as many
refugees
as Sweden, Germany, and Canada, the three most accommodating Western countries.
In addition to being unpopular among Turks, the accommodation of so many
refugees
from Syria and other conflict zones has cost the Turkish economy tens of billions of dollars.
There has been a great deal of discussion in Europe about how to manage the large inflow of
refugees.
Burden sharing by the European Union has produced very modest financial support for
refugees
in Turkey, with most of the aid going to help Turkey’s government stop further westward migration of the displaced.
Rather than fund programs that prevent
refugees
from leaving Turkey, why not provide financial support to help them stay?
But Turkey’s humanitarian response to the refugee crisis is deserving of support; indeed, to the extent that such support advances integration of refugees, it would reduce the need for aid intended to keep asylum-seekers out of the EU.
Germany is clearly acting to ease EU pressure on Poland, Hungary, and other Eastern European countries that are flouting the rule of law and undermining European solidarity with respect to migrants and
refugees.
Europe is already facing a perfect storm of fiscal strains, anemic economic growth, massive inflows of migrants and refugees, and renewed Russian aggression.
In Europe and elsewhere, inflows of Afghan
refugees
continue unabated.
But the truth is that it is more urgent than ever, not just to check the flows of
refugees
to Europe and elsewhere, but also to undermine terrorist recruitment efforts.
PEER will connect college-ready Syrian
refugees
with refugee-ready colleges, and it will eventually be a web-based higher-education conduit for displaced students at all grade levels worldwide.
This indifference mirrors similar reactions to other recent global appeals, such as for schooling for Syrian
refugees
in Lebanon.
There are now an estimated 600,000 to one million internal
refugees.
The Return of 1948TEL AVIV – The forthcoming United Nation’s conference commemorating the 60th anniversary of UNRWA (The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees) could not come at a better moment.
That demand brought the quest for peace back to its fundamentals, where the question of the
refugees
is bound to play a central role.
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