By Chriss Street
Middle East and
North African refugees are now streaming into the European Union countries and
many will soon try to come to America. When the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for
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Refugees (UNHCR) was established in 1951, there
were approximately 1.5 million refugees internationally. But last year
the refugee population grew by 22% to 11.3 million. This rising tide is
on track to swell to 14 million this year. Many of these people have been
fighting for and against the United States and its European allies in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and now Egypt. They know about America’s policy
of open borders and millions will flood into America
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On June 20th, António Guterres, UN High
Commissioner for Refugees said that the number of Syrian refugees had grown by another
million in the first six months of 2013 and now stand at 1.6 million
people. He stated the entire nation of 22.5 million “is being left to self-destruct as
it empties itself of its people.” He added: “With no clear
political resolution in sight, this civil war is in real danger of sliding into
a regional conflict.”
The European Union (EU) is already being inundated with
asylum seekers and illegal immigrants from the Middle East, North Africa and
the Caucasus. Under the Schengen
Agreement, 26 EU countries agreed to eliminate their national border
controls and stipulate that the country where refugees first arrive must also
take care of them. The willingness of the immigrants to work for cash has
magnified European unemployment rates and is heavily straining social welfare
systems.
In the economically unstable countries of Greece, Spain,
Italy and Malta along the EU southern border, this has created an especially
huge economic burden. The prevalence of anti-immigrant sentiment has
undermined efforts to limit migration of refugees transiting onward to Western
Europe. It is difficult to measure how many refugees have recently
streamed into the EU. But data released Aug. 2 by Eurostat, demonstrates the fraction
of refugees that apply for asylum in the EU rose to 85,000 during the first
quarter of 2013 — an increase of roughly 15,000 over the same period a year
earlier.
The increase in those seeking legal asylum has coincided
with the onset of the European economic crisis. EU refugee applications
rose steadily from 226,000 in 2008 to more than 335,000 by the end of 2012.
Economically healthy Germany had the highest number of outstanding
applications, followed by Greece, Belgium, France and Sweden. Germany
became the prime destination for asylum seekers after the German Constitutional
Court ruled last year refugees are entitled to social benefits comparable to
those of the German population and deeming any lower levels of aid to be
inhumane.
During the first half of 2013, nearly 10,000 Russians
applied for asylum in Germany versus 3,200 applications during the same period
in 2012. Frankfurt’s Allgemeine newspaper, citing German intelligence
services, claims that 90% of applicants are Russians citizens from Chechnya.
With the heavy crackdown on Muslim extremists in the Caucasus, Russian nationals
are now second, behind Afghans, as the highest number of asylum seekers over
the last four years.
The rise of the far-right Golden Dawn Party in Greece and
other similar parties in other EU countries is linked to the surge in
immigration. Greece’s geography makes the country an ideal destination
for Middle East asylum seekers looking to travel deeper into the EU to gain
access to economic stability, strong social benefits, favorable immigration
policies and existing large immigrant communities. Since 2008 the Greek economy has shrunk by 24%, business bankruptcies have
skyrocketed, unemployment is at a record 27.6 percent and unemployment is 64.9%
for people under 25. Most refugees arriving in Greece lack the funds to
travel deeper into Europe and have become unemployed squatters. Greeks
blame the EU treaty for giving refugees many of the social services that
benefits are being taken away from Greek citizens.
The U.S. refugee policy is controlled by the United States Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) that sets
the priority for entrance into the U.S. as 1) Cases referred to the program by
UNHCR; 2) Groups with special humanitarian concerns; and 3) Family
reunification cases. Last year the United States legally admitted 56, 424
refugees and has set a ceiling at 70,000 refugees in 2013.
But this trickle is about to become a flood as America
withdraws from U.S. sponsored civil wars across North Africa and the Middle
East. When America withdrew from South Vietnam in 1974, the country had a
population of 19.6 million people. Despite aggressive enforcement of
immigration restrictions during that period, over 823,000 “boat people” eventually gained refugee status and
resettled in the United States.
Today, America’s borders are open due to the “dreamer policy” that allows anyone who says they are under
the age of 31; entered the United States before age 16; and have continuously
lived in the country for at least five years. U.S. asylum seekers jumped
from 6,824 in 2012 to 14,610 so far this year, but a huge number entered the
country illegally. Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Egypt and Libya have a combined
population of about 180 million people. As America withdraws from the
Middle East and North Africa, a huge number of the refugees from losing side of
these civil wars will flood into America.
CHRISS STREET & PAUL PRESTON
Present On the Republic Radio Network in the USA and Canada
“The Agenda 21 Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Monday through Friday at 6-9 AM PST
http://redstatetalkradio.com/redstatewp/?p=1517#
Present On the Republic Radio Network in the USA and Canada
“The Agenda 21 Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Monday through Friday at 6-9 AM PST
http://redstatetalkradio.com/redstatewp/?p=1517#
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 7-10 PM PST
http://www.republicbroadcasting.org/shoutcast/shoutcast.html
http://www.republicbroadcasting.org/shoutcast/shoutcast.html
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