Refugee Crisis 'Totally Unmanageable' UN Cheif Says...

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Refugee Crisis 'Totally Unmanageable,’ UN Chief Says

Refugee Crisis 'Totally Unmanageable,’ UN Chief Says




Refugee camps in Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon have grown into villages and towns. But residents say without many resources or rights, there is no future in the camps, such as this one in Jordan. (H. Murdock/VOA))



U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Friday that the world's current refugee crisis, with more than 70 million displaced people, has become "totally unmanageable" and "uncontrollable."

Speaking at the World Bank headquarters in Washington at a panel discussion on the refugee situation, Ban called for political solidarity as the world faces the "biggest refugee and displacement crisis of our time."

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim told the panel that development solutions for countries facing refugee problems must come just as quickly as humanitarian help.

"We can no longer wait for the humanitarian experts to do their work while we enter later at some point with our long-term solutions after months or sometimes after years. We know we can no longer wait as countries implode and say, ‘Well, this is not our job,’ " he said.

Kim said the World Bank is working on a plan to loan money at zero percent interest to groups that will hire refugees.

"So how do you solve this problem of so many refugees who don't have livelihoods, who don't have income, and at the same time not just simply burden a country like Jordan with debt?" Kim asked.


FILE - Syrian refugees stand outside their tents at a Syrian refugee camp in the town of Hosh Hareem, in the Bekaa valley, east Lebanon, Oct. 28, 2015.
The panel also featured leaders from Lebanon and Jordan — two of the countries most affected by the Syrian civil war.

’10 South Carolinas’

Queen Rania of Jordan said one out of every seven people in her country is a Syrian refugee.

"To put that in context, if the United States received an equivalent influx, it will mean accommodating 50 million refugees. Think about that, 50 million. That's almost 2½ more Floridas, five Ohios, 10 South Carolinas," she said.

Queen Rania said the refugee crisis was a global one, adding, "We are deluding ourselves if we think it can be contained. We know all too well in our interconnected world a crisis in one place is a crisis in all places."

European Commission President Jean-Claude Junker said the crisis is testing the values and will of the European Union.

"It is reminding us that solidarity is not only a moral virtue, but an essential part of the European Union," he said.

Migration is one of the defining challenges of the 21st century, and Europe "will be defined by how we respond," Junker said.
 
If those 70 million go to Europe, that'll be the start of the European civil war. If it wasn't started 70 years ago.
 
Refugee Crisis 'Totally Unmanageable,’ UN Chief Says

Refugee Crisis 'Totally Unmanageable,’ UN Chief Says




Refugee camps in Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon have grown into villages and towns. But residents say without many resources or rights, there is no future in the camps, such as this one in Jordan. (H. Murdock/VOA))



U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Friday that the world's current refugee crisis, with more than 70 million displaced people, has become "totally unmanageable" and "uncontrollable."

Speaking at the World Bank headquarters in Washington at a panel discussion on the refugee situation, Ban called for political solidarity as the world faces the "biggest refugee and displacement crisis of our time."

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim told the panel that development solutions for countries facing refugee problems must come just as quickly as humanitarian help.

"We can no longer wait for the humanitarian experts to do their work while we enter later at some point with our long-term solutions after months or sometimes after years. We know we can no longer wait as countries implode and say, ‘Well, this is not our job,’ " he said.

Kim said the World Bank is working on a plan to loan money at zero percent interest to groups that will hire refugees.

"So how do you solve this problem of so many refugees who don't have livelihoods, who don't have income, and at the same time not just simply burden a country like Jordan with debt?" Kim asked.


FILE - Syrian refugees stand outside their tents at a Syrian refugee camp in the town of Hosh Hareem, in the Bekaa valley, east Lebanon, Oct. 28, 2015.
The panel also featured leaders from Lebanon and Jordan — two of the countries most affected by the Syrian civil war.

’10 South Carolinas’

Queen Rania of Jordan said one out of every seven people in her country is a Syrian refugee.

"To put that in context, if the United States received an equivalent influx, it will mean accommodating 50 million refugees. Think about that, 50 million. That's almost 2½ more Floridas, five Ohios, 10 South Carolinas," she said.

Queen Rania said the refugee crisis was a global one, adding, "We are deluding ourselves if we think it can be contained. We know all too well in our interconnected world a crisis in one place is a crisis in all places."

European Commission President Jean-Claude Junker said the crisis is testing the values and will of the European Union.

"It is reminding us that solidarity is not only a moral virtue, but an essential part of the European Union," he said.

Migration is one of the defining challenges of the 21st century, and Europe "will be defined by how we respond," Junker said.
This man is talking out of both sides of his mouth. He's got the Pope's mouthpiece - Peter Sutherland - UN Mass Migration Architect - at his right hand - demanding the West to open the floodgates and then he says it is unmanageable? Just incredible.
 
"totally unmanageable" and "uncontrollable." And they want to import them here? No, hell no.

That is Peter Sutherland's (he's a Jesuit) plan. Actually it is the Vatican's plan and he is rolling it out for them and their NWO so Pope Herod can get his next Inquisition on. Pray for America. I do not see any gatekeepers with the backbone to keep it out. We've been fully infiltrated. Washington in the lap of Rome should have been required reading in school. Unfortunately, it wasn't.

The Pope made sure that Sutherland was dubbed the "Father of Globalism" because he wants to keep the focus off of himself and the Vatican and the fact that they are writing his script.
 
"So how do you solve this problem of so many refugees who don't have livelihoods, who don't have income, and at the same time not just simply burden a country like Jordan with debt?" Kim asked.

We've been asking this same question for years with Hispanics. What they need to do is to get a hold of that region to stop the ongoing wars & whatnot, so the population won't need to flee
 
"So how do you solve this problem of so many refugees who don't have livelihoods, who don't have income, and at the same time not just simply burden a country like Jordan with debt?" Kim asked.

We've been asking this same question for years with Hispanics
The Hispanic people are not trying to force anyone to convert to Islam. They are not coming here to rape, murder and terrorize Americans. They are coming here for a better life and to send money home to their family. I love the Hispanic people. They are hard working, industrious people. I have never met a Hispanic person in my life who came here to destroy our constitution and install their own religion to rule America. I doubt you have either. The difference between an Islamic invasion and Mexicans moving to America is night and day.
 
"So how do you solve this problem of so many refugees who don't have livelihoods, who don't have income, and at the same time not just simply burden a country like Jordan with debt?" Kim asked.

We've been asking this same question for years with Hispanics
The Hispanic people are not trying to force anyone to convert to Islam. They are not coming here to rape, murder and terrorize Americans. They are coming here for a better life and to send money home to their family. I love the Hispanic people. They are hard working, industrious people. I have never met a Hispanic person in my life who came here to destroy our constitution and install their own religion to rule America. I doubt you have either. The difference between an Islamic invasion and Mexicans moving to America is night and day.
"So how do you solve this problem of so many refugees who don't have livelihoods, who don't have income, and at the same time not just simply burden a country like Jordan with debt?" Kim asked.

We've been asking this same question for years with Hispanics
The Hispanic people are not trying to force anyone to convert to Islam. They are not coming here to rape, murder and terrorize Americans. They are coming here for a better life and to send money home to their family. I love the Hispanic people. They are hard working, industrious people. I have never met a Hispanic person in my life who came here to destroy our constitution and install their own religion to rule America. I doubt you have either. The difference between an Islamic invasion and Mexicans moving to America is night and day.

Yes I do agree of the differences between the two being night & day. But there are similarities too. I and probably you also, have heard that very same question in regards to Hispanic refugees many times.
 
Is dat why dey come into Europe an' act like a buncha sex hooligans?...
confused.gif

Angela Jolie Pitt: Refugee system breaking down
Mon, 16 May 2016 - Angelina Jolie Pitt, the UN refugee agency's special envoy, warns the international humanitarian system for refugees is breaking down.
Ms Jolie Pitt has been speaking as part of the BBC's World on the Move day of coverage of global migration issues. She warned against a "fear of migration" and a "race to the bottom" as countries competed to be the toughest to protect themselves. Earlier, the UNHCR's head said the refugee crisis was now a global issue. UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi told the BBC that simply turning migrants away "won't work".

Under-funded

Ms Jolie Pitt said that more than 60 million people - one in 122 - were displaced globally - more than at any time in the past 70 years. "This tells us something deeply worrying about the peace and security of the world," she said, adding: "The average time a person will be displaced is now nearly 20 years." Ms Jolie Pitt said the "number of conflicts and scale of displacement had grown so large" the system to protect and return refugees was not working. She said that UN appeals were drastically under-funded. "With this then the state of today's world, is it any surprise that some of these desperate people, who are running out of all options and who see no hope of returning home, would make a push for Europe as a last resort, even at the risk of death?"

But Ms Jolie Pitt said that Europe was "only a fraction of the global refugee problem". Highlighting Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iran, Ethiopia, and Jordan, she said: "We in the West are neither at the centre of the refugee crisis, nor - for the most part - the ones making the greatest sacrifice." She warned that amid a "fear of uncontrolled migration" there was a "risk of a race to the bottom, with countries competing to be the toughest, in the hope of protecting themselves whatever the cost or challenge to their neighbours, and despite their international responsibilities". Isolationism was not the answer, she said, adding: "If your neighbour's house is on fire you are not safe if you lock your doors. Strength lies in being unafraid." Such policies would lead to an even greater set of problems, she said. "It would amount to the worst of both worlds: failing to tackle the issue and undermining international law and our values in the process." Urging the world to rally together, she said: "Whether we succeed will help define this century... the alternative is chaos."

Earlier, Mr Grandi told the BBC migration was now a global phenomenon needing a global response. He said the burden of caring for refugees had so far fallen "on a few countries that host hundreds of thousands of refugees, usually those near wars, near conflicts and a few donors that alone, seven or eight of them, give 80%-90%, of the funding". He admitted a solution would require "a very long and difficult discussion" but added: "There can't simply be a reaction whereby states shut down borders and push people away simply because it won't work."

MORE
 
Is dat why dey come into Europe an' act like a buncha sex hooligans?...
confused.gif

Angela Jolie Pitt: Refugee system breaking down
Mon, 16 May 2016 - Angelina Jolie Pitt, the UN refugee agency's special envoy, warns the international humanitarian system for refugees is breaking down.
Ms Jolie Pitt has been speaking as part of the BBC's World on the Move day of coverage of global migration issues. She warned against a "fear of migration" and a "race to the bottom" as countries competed to be the toughest to protect themselves. Earlier, the UNHCR's head said the refugee crisis was now a global issue. UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi told the BBC that simply turning migrants away "won't work".

Under-funded

Ms Jolie Pitt said that more than 60 million people - one in 122 - were displaced globally - more than at any time in the past 70 years. "This tells us something deeply worrying about the peace and security of the world," she said, adding: "The average time a person will be displaced is now nearly 20 years." Ms Jolie Pitt said the "number of conflicts and scale of displacement had grown so large" the system to protect and return refugees was not working. She said that UN appeals were drastically under-funded. "With this then the state of today's world, is it any surprise that some of these desperate people, who are running out of all options and who see no hope of returning home, would make a push for Europe as a last resort, even at the risk of death?"

But Ms Jolie Pitt said that Europe was "only a fraction of the global refugee problem". Highlighting Turkey, Pakistan, Lebanon, Iran, Ethiopia, and Jordan, she said: "We in the West are neither at the centre of the refugee crisis, nor - for the most part - the ones making the greatest sacrifice." She warned that amid a "fear of uncontrolled migration" there was a "risk of a race to the bottom, with countries competing to be the toughest, in the hope of protecting themselves whatever the cost or challenge to their neighbours, and despite their international responsibilities". Isolationism was not the answer, she said, adding: "If your neighbour's house is on fire you are not safe if you lock your doors. Strength lies in being unafraid." Such policies would lead to an even greater set of problems, she said. "It would amount to the worst of both worlds: failing to tackle the issue and undermining international law and our values in the process." Urging the world to rally together, she said: "Whether we succeed will help define this century... the alternative is chaos."

Earlier, Mr Grandi told the BBC migration was now a global phenomenon needing a global response. He said the burden of caring for refugees had so far fallen "on a few countries that host hundreds of thousands of refugees, usually those near wars, near conflicts and a few donors that alone, seven or eight of them, give 80%-90%, of the funding". He admitted a solution would require "a very long and difficult discussion" but added: "There can't simply be a reaction whereby states shut down borders and push people away simply because it won't work."

MORE

Not too sure where you're going with that question, but I really dislike that woman from the beginning of her career. Anyway, to your question....seemed to me those doing all the violence & shinanigans, were Somalians more so than Muslims or Syrians, but I could be wrong.

As for the immigration/refugee crisis.....I would think it better to 'fix' the problems they are running from. And it seems as though the UN should but haven't stepped up to do anything about it.
 

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