More than 60,000 Syrians are estimated to have fled the civil war to neighbouring Turkey, and roughly twice that number to Jordan. Providing help for the refugees in their tent camps is not just a moral imperative but also a matter of self-interest, the left-liberal daily Süddeutsche Zeitung argues: "Flows of refugees are also a political factor. The expulsion of Palestinians when Israel was founded has left the region destabilised to this day. ... In Jordan, Palestinian guerillas once planned to overthrow the king, who had them brutally expelled during the 'Black September' of 1970. In Lebanon, their new place of refuge, they upset the delicate balance between Christians and Muslims. ... Refugee camps are the breeding grounds of radicalism. The Afghan Taliban emerged from the Pakistani refugee camps on the border region. And Pakistani radicals also found new recruits among the army of uneducated, embittered, homeless refugees. ... There is a moral duty to help the Syrian refugees, with money if nothing else. But just as pressing a reason is our own self interest." (16/08/2012)
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Cobertura de debates » Civil war raging in Syria