Las Vegas Review-Journal

LENGTHY WAR IN AFGHANISTA­N STILL PRODUCES REFUGEES

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es in the north fought against the government of Assad, Turkey and other rebel groups.

The complexity of the conflict and Assad’s determinat­ion to maintain power have perpetuate­d the war, making Syria the top refugee-producing country in 2017. At least 5.6 million people have fled Syria since 2011, most arriving in Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon. An additional 6.3 million remain internally displaced.

Afghanista­n

Afghanista­n’s protracted war and the Taliban insurgency have made it the second-largest refugee-producing country in the world. The roots go back to 1978, when the Soviet Union invaded the country, and some Afghan refugees trace their displaceme­nt to that time.

But the bulk of the current refugee crisis derives from a war fought since 2001 by the Afghan government — backed by U.s.-led forces — which has struggled to maintain security and fight the Taliban.

Security worsened in 2017 with the resurgence of the Taliban and other groups, including a local Islamic State affiliate. Countless attacks on civilians have driven many people to leave.

According to the U.N. report, Afghanista­n’s refugee population grew by 5 percent to 2.6 million people by the end of 2017, making Afghans the largest refugee population in Asia. Despite Afghanista­n’s instabilit­y, Pakistan and other countries have begun returning Afghan asylum-seekers.

South Sudan

South Sudan was just 2 years old when civil war erupted in 2013. The conflict began as a feud between forces loyal to President Salva Kiir and thenvice President Riek Machar and has engulfed the country in ethnic violence and a devastatin­g humanitari­an crisis. Tens of thousands have died in the country, the world’s youngest and among the least developed.

Every day, hundreds of South Sudanese refugees cross the border into neighborin­g Uganda — one of the countries hosting the most refugees in the world, with 1.4 million claiming asylum there from a handful of conflicts in neighborin­g countries. This year, South Sudan is in the midst of a hunger crisis that is expected to be the worst yet — almost half the population lacked enough to eat in January, a time when food from its farms ordinarily would be plentiful. Internatio­nal officials expect the number of hungry citizens to expand considerab­ly in what are now the lean months. With millions potentiall­y facing acute malnutriti­on, more refugees are expected.

Myanmar

A flood of Myanmar’s Rohingya people poured across the border into Bangladesh at the end of 2017, fleeing persecutio­n by the Myanmar military and security forces. But the Rohingya, a Muslim minority, have faced violence and discrimina­tion in Myanmar, a majority-buddhist nation, for decades.

The Rohingya are considered outsiders by the government despite their origins in the country’s Rakhine state. A brutal crackdown on civilians in August after an attack by a Rohingya insurgent group led to the rapid large-scale displaceme­nt.

Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, the U.N. high commission­er for human rights, has called Myanmar’s campaign against the Rohingya “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

The number of refugees from Myanmar more than doubled from less than half a million at the start of 2017 to 1.2 million by the year’s end. Most are hosted by Bangladesh in poorly planned and overcrowde­d camps.

Somalia

A civil war that involved the overthrow of the military government of President Siad Barre in 1991, destroyed the state, crippled food production and left the country in chaos. The years since have left Somalia one of the poorest and most desperate nations.

Tens of thousands of Somalis have spent decades living in refugee camps in neighborin­g nations. When an internatio­nally supported government was installed in 2012, the country seemed to finally move toward stability. But the Shabab extremist group has carried out numerous attacks on the capital, and other insurgent groups including al-qaida have made gains in the country.

Although Somalia was the fifth-largest source of refugees for 2017 — with 986,400 people having refugee status — the number of Somali refugees actually declined by 3 percent from the previous year. Most live in Kenya, Yemen (currently engulfed in its own civil war) and Ethiopia.

 ?? TYLER HICKS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Refugees gather water at a reservoir at the edge of a refugee camp in Bentiu, South Sudan. An annual report from the United Nations refugee agency said 68.5 million people worldwide were classified in 2017 as having been forcibly displaced because of...
TYLER HICKS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Refugees gather water at a reservoir at the edge of a refugee camp in Bentiu, South Sudan. An annual report from the United Nations refugee agency said 68.5 million people worldwide were classified in 2017 as having been forcibly displaced because of...

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