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"REFUGEE CRISIS"
2016-1-40-044
ENG 102
SECTION- 19
SYED MOHAMMAD
LECTURER
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
Table of Contents
1. ABSTRACT .....................................................................................................3
2. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................3
3. REASONS OF CRISIS
3.1. CIVIL WARS .........................................................................................3
3.2. POLITICAL ISSUES ...............................................................................3
3.3. ETHNIC CONFLICTS .............................................................................4
3.4. HUMAN RIGHT VIOLATION ................................................................4
3.5. ECONOMIC CRISIS ..............................................................................4
4. RESOLVING REFUGEE CRISIS
5. CONCLUSION ................................................................................................5
6. REFERENCE ...................................................................................................6
1. ABSTRACT
As said by the UN Refugee Agency, in 2014 the number of populace around the
world were compulsorily displaced is 59.5 million.i The numbers are
predominantly soaring in countries which have been subjected to a practice of
redrawing the map by colonial powers or their provincial cronies. The retort to
the current developments a phase which has been dubbed as refugee crisis is
as polarizing and as challenging as facing.
2. INTRODUCTION
The colossal expatriate crisis bequeathed by the swelling measures of the Arab
Spring, the enduring Syrian Civil War and the compound collapses of civil
influence across parts of Africa and the Middle East over the preceding decade
challenges us. We are accustomed to the habits in which precedent refugee crises
have urbanized, variously, from the depredation of martial exploit; from
campaigns of opinionated maltreatment; from bouts of racial or spiritual
divergence; from implosions of utter clout; at moments of ecological upheaval; or,
as is frequently the crate, from combinations of the above.
Almost 4.5 million Syria's inhabitants have fled the state after the combat began
in 2011.ii Bashar al-Assad's government has beleaguered civilians brutally,
counting with compound armaments and cask grenades; Syrians have been
subjected to torture, murder, sexual slavery, crucifixion and other abysmal
carnage by the ISIS; and other groups for instance, Jabhat al-Nusra have
tormented and killed Syrians on top.
based hostility militias. All-out civil war bust out in 1988, leading to Barre's deport
in 1991. Nevertheless, till now, the clans have sustained the gory war amid
themselves, with no supervision being recognized. No less than one million
Somalis fled to the bordering country since 1991. iii
In the intervening time, mob fighting and anarchy made innumerable central
American families so frantic for their kids security that they sent those kids on a
death-defying voyage north headed for what they optimized would be wellbeing
in the United States. Their futures hang about vague.v
To be sure, there are also many economic migrants who travel to wealthy
countries in search of better opportunities for themselves and their families like it
is now happening in Greece. More than 200,000 Greeks have left the country
since the financial crisis hit. vi
All-inclusive, not less than 21 million people have been enforced to request
asylum overseas.vii Governments have a responsibility to facilitate them.
However, nearly all well-off countries are motionlessly treating refugees as
someone elses dilemma. Governments also have to end blaming migrants and
refugees for financial and communal problems, and instead prevent all kinds of
4|P ag e Refugee Crisis by Deemah Noor Uddin
REFUGEE CRISIS
chauvinism and ethnic prejudice. They immediately need to pledge full support to
ease expatriate crises.
4.2. EMPLOYMENT
Due to lack of job opportunity and to seek a better life, people turn out to initiate
dangerous journey to overseas illegally. Enriching the employment would
definitely stop such crisis.
Every single religion in this universe teaches the lesson of compassion and
clemency while forbids us from killing, torturing and hurting people. Proper
religious knowledge can pave the way to stop ethnic and racial clashes.
5. CONCLUSION
6. REFERENCE
i
Population Movement Bulletin - United Nations in Afghanistan. [Issue 4, 30 June
2016]
ii
Syria: The Story of The Conflict - BBC News. [11 March, 2016]
iii
Somalia - RefugeeMap
iv
The Threat to Burmas Minorities Harvard Gazette. [7 November, 2014]
v
Europes Refugee Crisis, Explained Vox. [5 September, 2015]
vi
Young, gifted and Greek: Generation G the worlds biggest brain drain The
Guardian. [19 January, 2015]
vii
8 Ways to Solve the World Refugee Crisis Amnesty International.