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7 years ago
 ings that President-Elect Obama can do is to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and start reallocating some of the funds being spent on military to helping move the refugees back to their homes, rebuilding the infrastructure so that they can actually live in their country. Also, he can use his position to help bring attention to the problems in the Congo and Darfur, and use diplomacy to help bring about solutions involving the governments of those nations. A HUGE move that would help end the refugee problem in Colombia would be for him to end the “War on Drugs” which has caused so much fighting among drug lords in South America resulting in the millions of refugees that are internally and internationally displaced in the South. Another way that he can have a huge impact would be to change the US’s policy on Israel (which isn’t really a policy, rather a blank check with no restrictions or accountability and unlimited arms supplies to perpetuate the genocide of another people). These steps would all go a long way to help better the world as a whole and help end refugee crises that don’t have to exist.
ings that President-Elect Obama can do is to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and start reallocating some of the funds being spent on military to helping move the refugees back to their homes, rebuilding the infrastructure so that they can actually live in their country. Also, he can use his position to help bring attention to the problems in the Congo and Darfur, and use diplomacy to help bring about solutions involving the governments of those nations. A HUGE move that would help end the refugee problem in Colombia would be for him to end the “War on Drugs” which has caused so much fighting among drug lords in South America resulting in the millions of refugees that are internally and internationally displaced in the South. Another way that he can have a huge impact would be to change the US’s policy on Israel (which isn’t really a policy, rather a blank check with no restrictions or accountability and unlimited arms supplies to perpetuate the genocide of another people). These steps would all go a long way to help better the world as a whole and help end refugee crises that don’t have to exist.  at of public schools, particularly in Jordan, where the most Iraqi refugees have settled. Public schools are overflowing with children, and there aren’t enough teachers or supplies to teach them all. Should refugee children be denied an education, or should Jordanian children receive a sub-par education since they have to cater to all of the students? UNHCR has been delivering food and supplies to countries that have been taking care of refugees in an effort to help ease the burden, but even then these host countries are in great need of help. A UNHCR-commissioned survey of nearly 1,000 Iraqis currently staying in Syria done in April of this year has shown that 95 percent had fled their homeland because of direct threats or general insecurity, and that only 4 percent currently had plans to return to Iraq. If you take four percent of 4.7 million Iraqis, you have only 188,000 people planning on returning in the near future. Remember, this is just plans to return, not actually returning, leaving millions internally or internationally displaced with not even a plan or hope of returning home soon. Even if they did go home, many would find that their homes were being occupied and would face the challenges of having their property restored to them, if it was left at all.
at of public schools, particularly in Jordan, where the most Iraqi refugees have settled. Public schools are overflowing with children, and there aren’t enough teachers or supplies to teach them all. Should refugee children be denied an education, or should Jordanian children receive a sub-par education since they have to cater to all of the students? UNHCR has been delivering food and supplies to countries that have been taking care of refugees in an effort to help ease the burden, but even then these host countries are in great need of help. A UNHCR-commissioned survey of nearly 1,000 Iraqis currently staying in Syria done in April of this year has shown that 95 percent had fled their homeland because of direct threats or general insecurity, and that only 4 percent currently had plans to return to Iraq. If you take four percent of 4.7 million Iraqis, you have only 188,000 people planning on returning in the near future. Remember, this is just plans to return, not actually returning, leaving millions internally or internationally displaced with not even a plan or hope of returning home soon. Even if they did go home, many would find that their homes were being occupied and would face the challenges of having their property restored to them, if it was left at all.