Muslim Countries Refuse to Take A Single Syrian Refugee, Cite Risk of Exposure to Terrorism
Breitbart,
29 January, 2017
Five of the wealthiest Muslim countries have taken no Syrian refugees in at all, arguing that doing so would open them up to the risk of terrorism. Although the oil rich countries have handed over aid money, Britain has donated more than Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar combined.
Between
10 and 12 million Syrians have been displaced by the bloody civil war
raging in their country. Most still remain within Syria’s borders,
but around four million have fled over the borders into neighbouring
countries, mostly Turkey Jordan and Lebanon, and beyond.
Lebanon,
which has 1.1 million Syrian refugees, shut her borders to
the Syrians in June of last year. Jordan, host to another 630,000,
followed suit in August last year, preventing more Syrians from
abandoning their country.
By
early August 2015, European states had received nearly 350,000 asylum
applications from Syrians, nearly a third of whom applied to Germany
for asylum. Another 65,000 have applied Sweden and 50,000 in
Serbia. Hungary
and Austria have
received close to 19,000 applications each although that figure
is likely
to rise,
while the UK is processing 7,030 applications, according to the
United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR).
Yet
amidst cries for Europe to do more, it has transpired that of the
five wealthiest countries on the Arabian Peninsula, that is, Saudi
Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain, not one has taken in a single
refugee from Syria. Instead, they have argued that accepting large
numbers of Syrians is a threat to their safety, as terrorists could
be hiding within an influx of people. Sherif Elsayid-Ali, Amnesty
International’s Head of Refugee and Migrants’ Rights, has slammed
their inaction as “shameful”.
He
said: “The records of Gulf countries is absolutely appalling,
in terms of actually showing compassion and sharing the
responsibility of this crisis… It is a disgrace.” None of the
Gulf States signed the 1951 Refugee Convention, which legally defines
a refugee as “A person who owing to a well-founded fear of being
persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of
a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the
country of his nationality”. However, they have taken refugees in
the past.
Twenty-five
years ago, hundreds of thousands of Kuwaitis fleeing Saddam Hussein’s
invasion were given refuge. According to Arabian expert Sultan Sooud
al-Qassemi: “in Abu Dhabi, the government rented out entire
apartment blocks and gave them to families for free.”
Instead
the countries, all of which are within the Top 50 list of wealthiest
nations by GDP, have opted to donate aid to those affected by the
crisis. According to the Daily
Mail,
the UAE has funded a refugee camp in Jordan giving shelter to tens of
thousands of Syrians, while Saudi Arabia and Qatar have donated
funds, food, shelter and clothing to Syrians in Lebanon, Turkey and
Jordan.
Total
donations from the Gulf States are believe to total £589 million,
less than a quarter of America’s £2.8 billion, and a fraction of
the £65 billion they spent on defence in 2012 alone. The UK has
handed over £920 million so far, but the Prime Minister yesterday
pledged to increase that figure to £1 billion. He also promised to
take in thousands
more refugees.
Al-Qassemi has
argued in
the that the standing that the Muslim countries now have in the
world confer on them a moral obligation to step in. “The Gulf
States have emerged as the nerve centres of Arab diplomacy, culture,
media production, commerce and tourism, amassing an unprecedented
degree of soft power unrivalled
in the region and beyond,” he said.
They
also form “the most influential bloc within the 70-year-old Arab
League.”
“But
with great power comes great responsibility. The Gulf must realise
that now is the time to change their policy regarding accepting
refugees from the Syria crisis. It is the moral, ethical and
responsible step to take.”
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