Chris Morris
12/13/2006
BBC
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On the desert border between
Syria and Iraq, a group of tents clings to the shifting sands. This is
a desolate place at the best of times.
Now it has become an unwanted home to more than 300 Palestinian
refugees. They fled from violence in Baghdad seven months ago, only to
get stuck in no-man's land.
--
The United Nations is providing basic food and shelter, and the Syrians
grant temporary access to urgent medical cases. But it is a bleak
situation.
And while the Palestinians say they would like to go to Europe or
Canada, there is hardly a queue of countries willing to help.
--
But as sad as it is, the dusty Palestinian camp is just a small
statistic - part of a mass movement of people, an exodus from Iraq.
Since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003 as many as two million
civilians searching for sanctuary have fled into neighbouring countries
like Syria, Jordan and Iran.
They are ill-equipped to cope. The
pressure group Refugees International calls it the fastest growing
humanitarian crisis in the world.
--
The numbers are staggering - at least three quarters of a million
Iraqis have fled to Syria alone. And every month the rate of arrival is
higher than it has been before.
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The latest arrivals from Iraq register at the Damascus office of the UN
refugee agency. Tens of thousands need urgent financial or medical
assistance, or trauma counselling.
A growing number of Iraqis are in the Syrian capital
But who is prepared to pay to help them?
"The funds we have at the moment are not sufficient," says Laurens
Jolles. "We are asking for more, we're approaching individual countries
to contribute. This is quite a small office and in no way capable of
dealing with the numbers that are here."
--
Some see the situation as a choice between stable authoritarianism in
Syria, and dangerous, frightening chaos and violence in Iraq.
Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have already voted with their feet.