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KurdistanObserver.com
Sweden Agrees To Receive Iranian-Kurdish
Asylum Seekers
AMMAN, 15 May (IRIN)
- Sweden has accepted 111 Iranian-Kurdish asylum seekers who have been
languishing for the past three years at al-Rweished refugee camp, 60km from the
Jordan-Iraq border, officials from the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said Monday.
According to Yara Sharif, spokeswoman for UNHCR in Amman, talks are also ongoing
with the government of Ireland to accept another 200 refugees. Sharif said that
UNHCR officials were racing against the clock to meet a deadline to resettle all
refugees by the end of September, when Jordan is scheduled to close the al-Rweished
camp permanently. "We've been talking to a number of host countries to resettle
all refugees, but we can't disclose further information until everything is
agreed upon," said Sharif.
At the outset of the war, al-Rweished – set up in 2003 to accommodate the
expected influx of refugees – became home to more than 1,200 Iraqis,
Palestinians, Somalis, Sudanese, Moroccans and Iranian Kurds. Over the past
three years, that number has dwindled to about 500, with many being resettled in
New Zealand, Ireland, the US, Australia, Denmark, Finland and Norway. Jordan has
also allowed a number of Palestinians with Jordanian spouses to settle in the
kingdom.
Hussein Yassi, one of the 111 refugees to be accepted by Sweden for
resettlement, said he was "ecstatic, but nervous" about his prospects. Sweden
also took in 360 Iranian-Kurdish refugees from the camp last year.
Yassi said his first move in Sweden would be to seek treatment for his
four-year-old daughter who suffers from a rare disease that requires regular
blood transfusions. "Finally, I'll be able to give my daughter proper medical
treatment," he said.
From his tent in Jordan's desolate petrified desert, Yassi and his daughter
Kajal often travel 300km to the nearest town for transfusions. "Kajal needed a
blood transfusion every two months, then every 45 days, and now every 25 days,"
he said. "I didn't know how long she could take it."
Residents of the camp, which is run by the Jordanian Hashemite Charity
Organisation, say they must often endure extreme weather conditions – such as
fierce sandstorms and icy winter nights – in the camp's open environment.
Jordan was among the first countries to open its borders to Iraqi refugees
fleeing the war. The government, however, having to cope with an existing
600,000 Iraqis who arrived in the 1990s, said refugees would not be allowed
permanent residence.
Currently, an agreement between Amman and UNHCR allows the latter to "provide
accommodation to those Iraqi and other nationals in need of temporary
protection, pending longer-term and durable solutions – in particular, the safe
return to their country of origin or habitual residence or resettlement in third
countries". |
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