Region | Iraq
Refugees to move from Iraq desert to Iceland, Sweden
Some of the most desperate refugees stranded in the Iraqi desert will move to Iceland and Sweden under a resettlement programme announced on Tuesday by the United Nations refugee agency.
Geneva: Some of the most desperate refugees stranded in the Iraqi desert will move to Iceland and Sweden under a resettlement programme announced on Tuesday by the United Nations refugee agency.
Ron Redmond, a spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said that more than two dozen Palestinians who have been stuck on the Iraq-Syria border for the last two years will be leaving for Iceland in the coming weeks.
Another 155 Palestinian refugees who fled Iraq only to be stuck on the edge of Syria, which has refused them entry, have been cleared for a move to Sweden, Redmond said.
"The two groups include some of the most vulnerable women and children with urgent medical needs requiring immediate attention," he told a news briefing in Geneva.
There are 2,300 Palestinians living in two refugee camps along the Syria-Iraq border who cannot return to Iraq or enter neighbouring countries. In the past 14 months, a dozen people have died among that group that lacks proper medical care.
"We hope that all of the Palestinians will be able to leave the harsh conditions of the camps sooner rather than later," Redmond said.
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