Denmark's anti-immigrant asylum industry has forced Syrian refugees into a corner. No longer welcome, Syrian refugees are increasingly denied protection or compelled to return to Assad's Syria, where they fear torture, imprisonment or death.
Turkey's Erdogan has accelerated his election pledge to deport Syrians, with many saying that they have faced physical and psychological trauma upon detention.
The cholera epidemic in Syria is another symptom of a persistent deep-rooted issue. Better access, more vaccines, and enhanced surveillance are needed to control the current outbreak.
Pointing to the more than 1.2 million asylum seekers welcomed by Germany in 2015 and 2016, the UNHCR selection committee hailed former Chancellor Angela Merkel's "leadership, courage and compassion."
number right now might be two times the one and a half million estimate, or even higher than that. because you can t keep track of everybody who s a refugee. this is the biggest refugee movements since world war ii. yes, you re right, ali. i m so sorry to say that my predictions of a week ago are looking correct. the reason is very simple, there is a merciless campaign being waged by the russians inside ukraine. and no one is safe. that is why you ve got these millions of people on the move. just by way of comparison, the syria refugee crisis, which produced about 6 million refugees, it took three months for the first million of those refugees to leave syria. as you know, it has taken for five days to reach the million figure in the ukraine case. now we are at one and a half million. there are two sides to this equation. one, the merciless campaign inside ukraine. all of the efforts to stymie