There are now four million refugees from Syria with 95 per
cent in only five host countries: Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt.
Despite calls from the international community and a coalition of charities for
more help, the UK has offered shelter to just 187 Syrian refugees.
42 per cent of Britons do not think foreign nationals
seeking safety from conflict or persecution should be welcomed to UK shores.
Last year, a similar survey found that 31 per cent of Britons believed the UK
should not let refugees in. Islamic Relief said it was a “dramatic hardening of
views” against people displaced by war such as the civil war in Syria. When it
comes to the Syrian crisis specifically 47 per cent of the people polled said
the UK should not provide refuge. Only 29 per cent were in favour.
The Refugee Council’s head of advocacy, Dr Lisa Doyle, said “Asylum
should have nothing to do with religion or nationality – it is about providing
safety to people who need it.”
Shaheen Chughtai, deputy head of humanitarian policy at
Oxfam, said the British public tends to respond well to natural disasters, but
as war is so complex, there can be a misunderstanding of the “horrors” of what
is happening. “It can be a challenge, because people don’t actually see what’s
going on,” he said. “In Syria, for example, it’s politics and war that has led
to the crisis. But often it’s innocent people who bear the brunt of the
persecution and destruction. If people saw the hunger, the extreme violence,
whole lives being torn apart, people might better realise what’s going on.”
Millions of refugees have been condemned to a life of misery in the worst displacement crisis since the second world war, Amnesty International blames world leaders’ neglect for the deaths of thousands of civilians fleeing wars in the Middle East and Africa.
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jun/15/worst-refugee-crisis-since-second-world-war-report-middle-east-africa-syria