(Reuters) - Syria's neighbors Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq
are cutting back sharply on the number of Syrians they allow onto their
soil as they can no longer cope with the influx of refugees, two
prominent humanitarian agencies said on Thursday. The number of refugees
able to flee their country's civil war fell 88 percent in October
compared with the 2013 monthly average, to 18,453 people from over
150,000, the International Rescue Committee and the Norwegian Refugee
Council reported. "Humanitarian
organizations have repeatedly warned that the capacities of the host
communities have been stretched to the limits and argued for better
international burden-sharing," said Jan Egeland, Secretary General of
the Norwegian Refugee Council. Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq
have taken in more than three million Syrian since the conflict began
in 2011, while countries outside the region have agreed to accept around
50,000, or less than 2 percent of the total refugee population.
"What we are witnessing
now are the results of our failure to deliver the necessary support to
the region. We are witnessing a total collapse of international
solidarity with millions of Syrian civilians," said Egeland. In
October, Lebanon, which has the highest per capita concentration
of refugees in the world at one in four residents, said it could not
cope with more than one million Syrians and has asked for funds to help
look after them. Resentment
against Syrians has grown with many complaining that refugees are
taking jobs, driving down wages, overloading schools and hospitals and
even worsening an electricity shortage which pre-dates the war in Syria. The
NGOs called on countries outside the region to provide financial
support to Syria's neighbors and take in at least five percent of the
total Syrian refugee population. "More refugees have been displaced from Syria
in the last month than have been resettled outside the region in the
last three years. It is a depressing failure of international
solidarity, and should spur the world's wealthier countries into
action," said David Miliband, president of the International Rescue
Committee and a former British foreign minister.
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