US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the US is committed to helping the world’s 34 million refugees build safe and fulfilling lives, calling their struggle a “humanitarian emergency.”
In a statement released on Saturday to commemorate World Refugee Day, Clinton called on the world community to end what she called “urgent refugee crises” in Iraq, Afghanistan, Chad, the Central African Republic and Darfur.
She said she was encouraged by improving situations in Liberia, South Sudan, Burundi and Bhutan but said countries must pitch in to do more.
PHOTO: EPA
“The crowded camps where refugees live are designed to be temporary, but many of the world’s displaced people become permanent residents,” she said.
“Children are born there; parents die there; people fall in love, marry — even divorce there. Outside the camps, the world seeks a solution to their plight, a way to send them home safely or help them find new homes in new lands,” Clinton said.
“Inside the camps, the refugees wait and hope,” she said.
Clinton said the US will continue to support the UN and other international aid groups to help refugees, citing more than US$1.4 billion the US provided last year to support their work.
“We stand with refugees because their struggle represents a humanitarian emergency,” Clinton said.
“We are committed to pursuing peace and prosperity in every corner — not only in the marble halls of governments, but also in the rural villages and distant cities where people strive to live, work, learn, raise families, contribute to their communities, and grow old with dignity,” she said.
Clinton was scheduled to make the remarks on Thursday but had to cancel after she injured herself in a fall on Wednesday.
On Friday she had successful surgery to repair a fractured right elbow. The State Department says she’s expected to make a full recovery.
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