Donors slow to honour Syria refugee pledge

epaselect epa05143280 British Prime Minister David Cameron (L-R), Lebanese Prime Minister Tamman Salam, Kuwait Emir Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davoutoglu, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg following the press conference at the 'Supporting Syria And The Region' Conference in London, Britain, 04 February 2016. Britain and the four other co-hosts of an international donors conference - Germany, Norway, Kuwait and the United Nations - hope participants will pledge about 9 billion dollars to help 13.5 million people in Syria and 4.4 million refugees in neighbouring states.  EPA/ANDY RAIN

 

Washington / AFP

In February, the richest world powers pledged more than $11 billion to help frontline states in the Middle East cope with the Syrian refugee crisis.
But four months later, less than a quarter of the headline sum has been turned over and five million people are still at risk in an unstable region.
Countries like Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey are struggling with the influx—and the displaced populations face the threat of radicalization in their ranks.
“So I think there’s a collective failure that will have to be addressed,” Amin Awad, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees director for the Middle East and North Africa, said in an interview.
Awad said that since February, when foreign ministers from around the world gathered at a London donor conference, only $2.5 billion have been disbursed.

Frontline states
This is in the form of loans, grants for specific uses like student bursaries and straight-forward humanitarian aid, but it has not proved enough.
“I think the frontline states are disappointed and they feel they’re left alone,” he said in Washington, where he is meeting US officials and experts.
Quite simply, the world is facing an unprecedented refugee crisis with at least a dozen protracted wars and crises ongoing at the same time.
There are more refugees worldwide than ever before—around 60 million—and more than a third of these are from the broader Middle East region alone.
“If you look at the Middle East population compared the world’s seven billion people, it is about five to seven percent,” he said.
“And yet they’ve produced 35 to 40 percent of these cases,” he added. “It’s a region that has seen a lot.”
Iraq has been evolving through periods of instability and of outright civil war since the US-led invasion of 2003 ousted long-standing dictator Saddam Hussein.

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