Yahoo – AFP,
9 Dec 2014
Countries
have more than doubled the number of Syrian refugees they are willing to
resettle to over 100,000, the head of the UN refugee agency said Tuesday.
"Today,
28 countries expressed their solidarity with the Syrian refugees but also with
the five neighbouring countries which are hosting them... offering what we
estimate will be more than 100,000 opportunities for resettlement and
humanitarian admission," Antonio Guterres told reporters after a
high-level pledging conference in Geneva.
There was
no clear overview over which countries had pledged what, but Guterres stressed
the leading role played by Germany and Sweden in the resettlement programme.
Germany,
which is hosting some 80,000 Syrian refugees, including 20,000 in the UN
resettlement programme, did not immediately pledge additional spots, saying it
was waiting for a signal from the European Union and demanding a
"Europe-wide campaign" to help distribute the burden more evenly.
Going into
the conference, just over 40,000 resettlement places had been pledged by two
dozen countries, Guterres said. After the forum, he voiced confidence that
"we have clearly more than doubled the perspectives that we had until
now".
While only
66,254 of the pledged spots were "firm and concrete", Guterres
pointed out that 11 countries had announced they were creating new resettlement
programmes or would be expanding existing programmes.
The UNHCR
has called on countries by 2016 to help resettle 130,000 of the more than 3.2
million registered refugees amassed in Syria's neighbours since the conflict
erupted in March 2011.
The influx
is putting a huge strain on host countries Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and
Egypt, and Guterres said he was "very happy" with the solidarity
voiced at the conference.
He stressed
though that Tuesday's pledges were "not the end of the process. That is
the beginning of a process," and that the UN would continue pushing on
towards the 130,000 goal.
But even
that would only be a step towards covering the true resettlement need for
Syrian refugees, Guterres said, pointing to estimates that at least 10 percent,
or more than 300,000, of the refugees would be best served through
resettlement.
Sweden,
which counts the most Syrian refugees compared to population size, with some
60,000 asylum seekers from the war-torn country, said it would double its
current 1,500 resettlement spots.
German
Interior Minister Emily Haber told AFP that "Europe cannot keep its eyes
shut," insisting on the need to offer "adequate housing" to the
Syrian refugees.
Guterres
also hailed the United States for vowing to "accelerate" its
resettlement programme, which is already reviewing 9,000 Syrian cases.
"We
are receiving roughly 1,000 new ones each month, and we expect admissions from
Syria to surge in 2015 and beyond," Anne Richard, the US Assistant
Secretary of State for Population, Refugees and Migration, told the conference.
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