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Refugee Concerns and U.S. Interests
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14223 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1988 |
2,168 Words |
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Jonathan Moore Ambassador Jonathan Moore is U.S. coordinator for refugees. |
The United States has a historical, nonpartisan, priority commitment to humanitarian assistance to refugees. Americans care about refugees because we are a compassionate people, because we ourselves are a nation of global ties, and because our national interests abroad involve us inextricably in refugees' fates.
When waves of humanity surge across borders, it matters little whether the persons arriving are legally eligible to be considered refugees, displaced persons, or persons of concern under the UN High Commissioner for Refugees' extended mandate. At the beginning, they are fearful, hungry, sick, fleeing people. The world's response is to care for them, provide them the necessities of life and sort out identities, priorities, and criteria later.
It is generally accepted that the present refugee population worldwide numbers over 12 million, with millions more who are displaced or "at risk" in "refugee-like circumstances." Africa is the area most extensively affected. Mozambican refugees have fled to all surrounding countries; one-tenth of the population is outside of Mozambique. Malawi hosts some 500,000 Mozambican refugees; the Republic of South Africa has approximately 200,000 within its borders. Refugees of the fighting in Angola have also spread to neighboring areas. In Ethiopia, warfare, repressive government policies such as forced resettlement, and tribal persecution have forced well over one million people into exile. Sudan is host to some 650,000 refugees from Ethiopia, plus several hundred thousand more from Uganda and Chad. Throughout Africa, drought, famine, and feeble economies have exacerbated refugee movements provoked by
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