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  • Exodus from Iraq

    I wondered how many have left Iraq. The Washington Times to-day says the number is estimated at 2 million during the last 4 years. The UNHCR estimate is 40 to 50 thousand a month.

    The population before the invasion was something above 20 million.

    BAGHDAD — Razi Gali Hamdum pushed toward one of a dozen windows in a simple brown building in central Baghdad, undeterred by a throng of desperate countrymen or the infernal midday sun.


    I guess if I was an Iraqi I'd be trying to get out if I could.

    Hard to know where they are going. The UNHCR thinks mostly they join refugees in Syria and Jordan.

    I don't think the US or UK have taken many in.

  • #2
    I'm surprised the Washington Times noted such a trend.

    I think it would be good to take them in, if they want it. Seems like the stand-up thing to do.

    -Arrian
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    • #3
      Re: Exodus from Iraq

      Originally posted by East Street Trader

      Hard to know where they are going. The UNHCR thinks mostly they join refugees in Syria and Jordan.
      There are about a million in Syria, most of them in/around Damascus. House prices have skyrocketed.
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      • #4
        Part of my portfolio here is Immigration Fraud. The amount of that fraud being perpetrated by Iraqis is understandable, but astounding. We haven't seen much of it in Singapore, but Kuala Lumpur seems to be a favorite jumping off point for those desperate to get to the West. (In truth, though, from a fraud perspective, Sri Lankans are a far bigger problem than Iraqis in our corner of the world; still, the Iraqi fraud is on the uptick.)
        "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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        • #5
          The Swedish immigrations office have decided that Iraq is not a war zone and that all refugees could be returned (=expelled) safely.
          Last edited by Chemical Ollie; August 8, 2007, 16:58.
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          • #6
            I think it would be good to take them in, if they want it. Seems like the stand-up thing to do.


            Yep. It would be an utter disgrace not to. Besides, I've been looking forward to some decent Iraqi food...
            "Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way. "
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            • #7
              Originally posted by Chemical Ollie
              The Swedish immigrations office have decided that Iraq is not a war zone and that all refugees could be returned (=expelled) safely.
              They probably read the "Mission Accomplished" banner and concluded that major combat operations are over.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Chemical Ollie
                The Swedish immigrations office have decided that Iraq is not a war zone and that all refugees could be returned (=expelled) safely.
                Well, the reasoning's a fig leaf, but I don't blame them. Sweden has nothing to do with this fiasco, and yet has processed over 9000 asylum appications from Iraq (edit: in 2006 alone). The US, which created the whole refugee problem in the first place (ok, the UK helped), has taken in fewer than 500 Iraqi refugees in the past three years. Bush has pledged that the US would admit 7000 refugees by September of this year, but the notion that we're suddenly going to be able (and willing) to process 6500 refugees in the next six weeks is laughable.

                Sweden vigorously, and rightly, opposed our invasion; I certainly can't begrudge their opposing cleaning up our mess, too. If that's the best excuse they can come up with, so be it.
                Last edited by Rufus T. Firefly; August 8, 2007, 23:41.
                "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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                • #9
                  Nice the right to asylum ought to depend on political expediency IYO.
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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Colonâ„¢
                    Nice the right to asylum ought to depend on political expediency IYO.
                    A reasonable argument can be made that all rights, in the end, depend upon political expediency. But I'll skip that one.

                    I will suggest, OTOH, that the right to asylum does not supersede a nation's right to protect its self-interest. If Sweden has determined that it taking in more Iraqi refugees does significantly more harm to their national interests than taking them in does good, then that is their right. Moreover, if counterarguments like "but the refugees are a burden you helped create" or "but you're doing no more than other like-minded countries" do not apply, they should feel no guilt about their decision.

                    The Swedes are certainly free to be better than everyone else, but its wrong to expect it of them.
                    "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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                    • #11
                      I guess you guys have never heard of the State of Michigan.

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                      • #12
                        I would think that if they believe in political assylum, then allowing in the victims of actions you protest against would be the morally right thing to do... ?

                        Otherwise they should stop protesting on moral grounds, and admit that they're just defending their national interest. Which in the case of the Iraq war would have been null (unless opposing the US is their national interest, but they'd never admit that, right?)..
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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Harry Tuttle
                          I guess you guys have never heard of the State of Michigan.
                          Michigan has a hug Iraqi population, to be sure, but relatively few of them are refugees from the current war.
                          "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by snoopy369
                            I would think that if they believe in political assylum, then allowing in the victims of actions you protest against would be the morally right thing to do... ?

                            Otherwise they should stop protesting on moral grounds, and admit that they're just defending their national interest. Which in the case of the Iraq war would have been null (unless opposing the US is their national interest, but they'd never admit that, right?)..
                            I'm not aware that Sweden is protesting on moral grounds. They did in 2003, God love 'em, but I don't think they are now; the train has left the station on that one.

                            Maybe in responding to ollie, I wasn't making myself clear: Sweden has already done far, far more for Iraqi refugees than any other country on earth; their moral credentials on this issue are impeccable. If they have now reached the conclusion that they've reached the limit of what they can do, they should not be ashamed to say so; rather, the rest of the world -- and especially the US -- should be shamed into catching up with them.

                            And now that I think of it: Sweden's in the EU. Certain other EU countries -- Finland, Germany, and the Netherlands in particular -- have done a reasonable job with the refugee crisis, but where the hell are the rest of their confederates? If Sweden's tapped out, why aren't France, Belgium, and Spain saying, "Nice job, Sweden! We'll take it from here?"
                            "I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin

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                            • #15
                              I have no solutions to offer. But the situation would seem to need addressing.

                              I don't know what the effect on Syria might be of hosting a million refugees currently and having up to 40 or 50 thousand more arriving monthly. But I don't think the effect will be a good one.

                              For Syria, for the refugees or for the stability of the middle east generally.

                              Before the war I gather Iraq provided work to a whole lot of migrant workers in that region.

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