Published today (updated) 22/06/2010 13:12
Madrid -
IRIN
-
The United Nations' humanitarian news and analysis service released a
report on Palestinian refugees on Tuesday, one day after the world
marked the International Day of the Refugee.
The following are
facts and figures about the current and historical situation of
Palestinian refugees starting in 1948.
Fast facts
The total number of displaced Palestinians worldwide is 7.1 million,
including:
- 6.6 million refugees, and 427,000 internally displaced
persons (IDPs)
- 67 percent of all Palestinians worldwide are
refugees or IDPs
- 4,766,670 refugees registered with
UNRWA
- UNRWA definition of
Palestinian refugees: "People whose
normal place of residence was Palestine between June 1946 and May 1948,
who lost both their homes and means of livelihood as a result of the
1948 Arab-Israeli conflict." As a rule, those displaced after 1948 do
not qualify for UNRWA assistance
- More than one million refugees
whose displacement dates back to 1947-1948 are not registered with UNRWA
- 340,016 Palestinians are registered with
UNHCR
Timeline
- 29 November 1947: By approving
Resolution 181, the UN General Assembly adopted a plan to partition
the 1923-48 British Mandate of Palestine.
- November 1947-July
1949: War in the British Mandate of Palestine led to the flight of over
720,000 Palestinians, according to the UN. Non-UN estimates for the
number of refugees displaced in 1948 range from 400,000 to almost one
million.
- 9 April 1948: The Deir Yassin massacre just outside
Jerusalem in which over 100 Palestinians were killed, shocked civilian
Palestinian populations throughout the British Mandate of Palestine
- 11 December 1948: By issuing
Resolution 194,
the UN General Assembly recognized the Palestinian refugees' right to
return to their homes. To date, this resolution has not been
implemented.
- 14 May 1948 - July 1949: Hours after British
withdrawal from the British Mandate of Palestine on 14 May 1948, the
state of Israel was declared on 78 percent of that territory. Following
the Arab rejection of the UN Partition Plan to divide Palestine between
Jews and Arabs, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt and Iraq invaded Israel.
- July 1949: Israel reached armistice agreements with Syria,
Lebanon, Jordan and Egypt.
- 1 May 1950: UNRWA began its field
operations.
- 5-10 June 1967: War broke out between Israel and
Egypt, Syria and Jordan. As a result of the conflict, an additional
100,000-300,000 Palestinians became displaced.
- 1967-present
day: Estimates vary greatly on the
annual rate of new displacements, but Palestinian sources cite up to
20,000 newly displaced persons per year.
Reasons for new
displacement include Israel's
construction of a separation barrier in the West Bank and Jerusalem, the
construction of illegal Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank,
the revocation of residency rights and house demolitions.
Country
by country: Where do the Palestinians live
The overwhelming majority
of Palestinians live in the Middle East. UNRWA operates in Jordan,
Lebanon, Syria and the occupied Palestinian territory. There are also
sizeable numbers of refugees living in Iraq, Egypt and outside the
Middle East.
Jordan
- Around 1.9 Palestinian refugees are
registered with UNRWA
- Unlike any other host country, Jordan granted
Palestinian refugees full citizenship rights, except for 120,000 people
who originally came from the Gaza Strip
- There are 10 official and
three unofficial refugee camps in Jordan
Click
here for more
information on UNRWA's operations in Jordan
Lebanon
- Around
425,000 Palestinian refugees are registered with UNRWA
- There are 12
official refugee camps
- Given their condition as stateless,
Palestinians in Lebanon are denied many basic rights
basic rights. For instance, they are barred from around 20
professions and have no access to public social services. Even access to
health and educational services is limited, often rendering registered
refugees heavily dependent on UNRWA.
- Around 3,000 Palestinians in
Lebanon are not registered with UNRWA
and have no other form of identity documents. They are barred from
practically every form of assistance, and survive thanks to NGOs.
Click here for
more information on UNRWA's operations in Lebanon.
Syria
Around 427,000 Palestinian refugees are registered with UNRWA.
There
are nine official and three unofficial camps.
Palestinians enjoy the
same rights as the Syrian population, barring citizenship rights.
Click here here
for more information on UNRWA's operations in Syria.
Gaza
- An
estimated 1.1 million Palestinians out of Gaza's 1.5 million population
are UNRWA-registered refugees.
- There are eight UNRWA-administered
camps in the Gaza Strip.
- As a result of Israel's occupation since
1967 and an ongoing blockade on the Gaza Strip, the population suffers
severe economic problems.
UNRWA's activities in the Gaza Strip have
been severely restricted by the blockade.
- Military conflict,
including Israel's 23-day military offensive starting 27 December 2008,
has led to the frequent destruction of homes and other infrastructure in
Gaza, much of which has not been rebuilt because of the blockade.
Click here for
more information on UNRWA's operations in Gaza.
West Bank
-
779,000 Palestinians are registered with UNRWA.
- There are 19
overcrowded and poorly serviced camps.
- The ongoing occupation and
military checkpoints and closures implemented by the Israeli army put a
huge strain on the West Bank economy.
Click
here for more
information on UNRWA's operations in the West Bank.
Israel
-
Palestinians whose forbears were displaced in 1948 but remained within
the borders of what is now Israel are
estimated to number 335,204.
- They have the right to Israeli
citizenship but are denied the right to return to their home towns or
villages.
Egypt
- Palestinians fled to
Egypt during the 1948, 1956 and
1967 wars.
- It is estimated that there are up to 50,000 Palestinians
in Egypt.
- However, they do not have permanent residency rights, nor
can they register as refugees.
- There is no UNRWA presence in Egypt.
Iraq
- Up until May 2006, UNHCR estimated that 34,000
Palestinians lived in Iraq. Today, only 11,544 UNHCR-registered
Palestinian refugees remain.
- Palestinians have been targeted and
scores have been killed by militant groups since the 2003 US-led
invasion of Iraq. As such, many Palestinians who were living in Iraq
have suffered forced displacement twice: once from their original homes,
and then from their host country.
- Most fleeing Palestinians have
sought refuge in neighboring Syria and Jordan.
UNRWA versus UNHCR
Such is the scale and uniqueness of the Palestinian refugee problem that
the UN has one agency for Palestinian refugees alone and another for all
other refugees across the world.
After the 1948 Arab-Israeli
conflict, the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the
Near East (UNRWA) was established by the UN General Assembly on 8
December 1949 "to carry out direct relief and works programmes for
Palestine refugees."
UNRWA began operations on 1 May 1950 and
because no solution to the Palestine refugee problem has been
forthcoming, the General Assembly has repeatedly renewed UNRWA's
mandate, most recently extending it until 30 June 2011.
The UN
Refugee Agency (UNHCR) was established on 14 December 1950 to help
Europeans displaced by World War II. It is mandated to "to lead and
co-ordinate international action to protect refugees and resolve refugee
problems worldwide."
The BADIL Resource Centre for Palestinian
Residency and Refugee Rights describes the situation of Palestinian
refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) as "the largest and
longest-standing case of displaced persons in the world today."