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    26 commenti

    1. Iran is a surprise name there. Where do its hosted refugees come from?

    2. potatolulz on

      Oh damn, that might be tough to see for the “why don’t they go somewhere else/nearest safe country/’their kind’ country?!?!” crowd 😀

      *^”but.. ^but… ^economic ^migrants!! ^Ha! ^checkmate, ^lebrels!”*

      Yes, everyone wants better future prospects and them not being refugees means they’re even more likely to get a job as soon as possible due to not having refugee status.

    3. CanadianMultigun on

      Ranked on a per capita basis after removing the refugee totals from the population the picture is very different

      Edit: Deleted because when I got AI to do the mathematics it fucked up and left our a bunch of information but suffice to say per capita numbers look very different than the sheer numbers initially presented

    4. No-Tomatillo3698 on

      Wha…what?! Right wing politicians told me our country is being flooded by immigrants, yet my country isn’t even on this chart?!?! Could it be they lied to us?! /s 

    5. madhatterlock on

      Doesn’t exactly support the practice of accepting refugees.. Those on the top haven’t been the greatest places to live, nor have they thrived. Where do German refugees come from primarily?

    6. Meanwhile we have large and violent protests here in The Netherlands and we aren’t even on the list. People here have been manipulated in blaming refugees for our problems. This narrative proofs to be very effective.

    7. InMyLiverpoolHome25 on

      Now watch as the same posters who beat their chest about how important it is to support Ukraine against Russia cry because Ukrainian refugees are in their country.

    8. EstablishmentLow2312 on

      The prominence of Sudan and Uganda among the world’s leading refugee hosting states underscores the asymmetrical geography of displacement management and the enduring entanglement between African instability and broader international interventions. The mass influxes of refugees into these countries predominantly from South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Ethiopia cannot be understood in isolation from external geopolitical dynamics. NATO’s 2011 intervention in Libya, though justified under a humanitarian mandate, precipitated the collapse of Libyan state structures, the proliferation of transnational militias, and the diffusion of arms across the Sahel and Horn of Africa, thereby exacerbating regional insecurity. Concurrently, European Union migration-containment policies have institutionalized a system of extraterritorial border control, funding states such as Sudan and Libya to intercept and detain migrants en route to Europe. This has effectively externalized Europe’s asylum responsibilities onto less-resourced states. Moreover, the increasing involvement of Gulf actors particularly the United Arab Emirates in financing infrastructure, security operations, and paramilitary groups in Sudan and its periphery has deepened competition over trade routes and natural resources, further destabilizing the region. Consequently, the humanitarian burdens borne by Sudan and Uganda are not solely products of local conflict, but manifestations of a global political economy in which powerful states and alliances externalize both the origins and the management of displacement.

      References:

      * Fakhry, S. (2021). Outsourcing European Borders: The EU’s External Migration Policies in North Africa. European Council on Foreign Relations.

      * Gallopin, J. (2020). Sudan’s Gulf Politics: Regional Rivalries and Domestic Challenges. Carnegie Middle East Center.

      * Kuperman, A. J. (2015). Obama’s Libya Debacle: How a Well-Meaning Intervention Ended in Failure. Foreign Affairs, 94(2), 66–77.

      * Lemberg-Pedersen, M. (2019). Manufacturing Displacement: Externalization and Refugee Containment in EU–Africa Relations. Journal of Borderlands Studies, 34 (5), 605–622.

      * Patey, L. (2021). Sudan’s Political Marketplace and the Role of Gulf States. Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS) Report.

      * UNHCR. (2024). Global Trends: Forced Displacement in 2023. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

      * Wehrey, F. (2018). The Burning Shores: Inside the Battle for the New Libya. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

      😏😏😏😏

    9. AdministrationSea96 on

      In the UK they quickly get passports and stop being refugees but become naturalized citizens.

    10. Dont_Knowtrain on

      This is a massive underestimation for Iran and Turkey, but I’m guessing this is registered

    11. -forsen_ on

      Only 400 000 refugees in czechia? thought its going to be higher. Also seeing how Italy and Spain dont have any refugees, i hope they will take all the refugess from the middle east and we dont have to take any. Unlike in Italy and Spain, our culture is not really compatible with islam.

    12. It is MUCH more than that for Turkiye. I would say close to 10 m. We get those numbers biannually, the amount of illegal immigrants that come into our country each year increases every year since 2015. It is getting worse and worse in here in both safety and economy because of that.

    13. Lofi_Joe on

      EU will be doomed when they start to grow families… Tha5s why USA makes *clean*.

      Lets day it loud, they can take everything we worked for centuries

    14. Ambersfruityhobbies on

      Does Iran change their status and naturalise refugees in the manner that EU countries do?

    15. sirSlani on

      iran and turkey take refugees to use them as a weapon and a bargaining tool

    16. LeaguePuzzled3606 on

      There are two very simple plain facts.

      1. Most refugees do in fact “stay in the region”

      2. The UNHCR, the UN org responsible for refugee aid, has been running a deficit since it was founded.

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