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19 June 2013
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SLIDESHOW: Syria's rising displacement crisis
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Photo:
Jodi Hilton/IRIN
DUBAI, 2 January 2013 (IRIN) - "There is no safe place in Syria any more."
The words of one displaced man may be a bit of an exaggeration, but they are symptomatic of how many Syrians feel after nearly two years of conflict.
More than half a million Syrians have fled their country; registering with the UN Refugee Agency in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Egypt, even Iraq - living in difficult conditions in tented camps or with families that have taken them in. The better-off have left for North Africa, the Gulf and Europe.
View slideshow
Others affected by the violence do not make it out - either unable or reluctant to cross international borders. At least two million are displaced from their homes - living in thousands of schools and unfinished public buildings in Syria, subject to the elements and struggling to find food for their families.
Aid agencies expect the number of people seeking refuge abroad to double in the next six months, surpassing one million, as the conflict continues to ruin people's lives.
Read more
FILM: Where the war still echoes - Syrian refugees in Jordan
Syria: Nowhere to run
Syria: IDPs brace for winter in rebel-controlled camps
Analysis: Not-so-open borders for Syrian refugees?
Briefing: The mounting refugee crisis
Turkey: Syrian refugees choosing to work risk exploitation
Jordan: Syrian child refugees who work - culture or coping mechanism?
Lebanon-Syria: The refugee minefield
Iraq-Syria: Iraqi Kurdistan welcomes brethren, for now
In Brief: How (not) to build a refugee camp in the desert
Syria: Turkey opens up to international aid in camps
Lebanon-Syria: No school today - Why Syrian refugee children miss out on education
Syria: Fighting in capital adds to growing displacement challenge
ha/cb
Theme (s)
:
Children
,
Conflict
,
Refugees/IDPs
,
[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
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SLIDESHOW: Syria's rising displacement crisis
Follow @{0}
FEEDBACK
EMAIL
PRINT
EASY READ
SHARE
Photo:
Jodi Hilton/IRIN
DUBAI, 2 January 2013 (IRIN) - "There is no safe place in Syria any more."
The words of one displaced man may be a bit of an exaggeration, but they are symptomatic of how many Syrians feel after nearly two years of conflict.
More than half a million Syrians have fled their country; registering with the UN Refugee Agency in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Egypt, even Iraq - living in difficult conditions in tented camps or with families that have taken them in. The better-off have left for North Africa, the Gulf and Europe.
View slideshow
Others affected by the violence do not make it out - either unable or reluctant to cross international borders. At least two million are displaced from their homes - living in thousands of schools and unfinished public buildings in Syria, subject to the elements and struggling to find food for their families.
Aid agencies expect the number of people seeking refuge abroad to double in the next six months, surpassing one million, as the conflict continues to ruin people's lives.
Read more
FILM: Where the war still echoes - Syrian refugees in Jordan
Syria: Nowhere to run
Syria: IDPs brace for winter in rebel-controlled camps
Analysis: Not-so-open borders for Syrian refugees?
Briefing: The mounting refugee crisis
Turkey: Syrian refugees choosing to work risk exploitation
Jordan: Syrian child refugees who work - culture or coping mechanism?
Lebanon-Syria: The refugee minefield
Iraq-Syria: Iraqi Kurdistan welcomes brethren, for now
In Brief: How (not) to build a refugee camp in the desert
Syria: Turkey opens up to international aid in camps
Lebanon-Syria: No school today - Why Syrian refugee children miss out on education
Syria: Fighting in capital adds to growing displacement challenge
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