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Refugee camp for Rwandans located in what is now the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo following the Rwandan Genocide.
A camp in Guinea for refugees from Sierra Leone.
Nahr el-Bared, Palestinian refugee camp in North Lebanon in 2005.

A refugee camp is a temporary camp built to receive refugees. Hundreds of thousands or even millions of people may live in any one single camp. Usually they are built and run by a government, the United Nations, or international organizations, (such as the Red Cross) or NGOs

Refugee camps are generally set up in an impromptu fashion and designed to meet basic human needs for only a short time. Some refugee camps are dirty and unhygienic. If the return of refugees is prevented (often by civil war), a humanitarian crisis can result.

Some refugee camps grew into permanent settlements, such as Ein el-Helweh, and have existed for decades, which has major implications for human rights

Contents

[edit] Facilities

Facilities of a refugee camp can include the following:

[edit] Duration

People may stay in these camps, receiving emergency food and medical aid, until it is safe to return to their homes. In some cases, often after several years, other countries decide it will never be safe to return these people, and they are resettled in "third countries," away from the border they crossed.

[edit] Exportation

Globally, about 17 countries (Australia, Benin, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Canada, Chile, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States) regularly accept "quota refugees" from refugee camps.[1] Refugee camps are typically used to describe settlements of people who have escaped war. In recent years, most quota refugees have come from Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq, Liberia, Somalia, and Sudan, which have been in various wars and revolutions, and the former Yugoslavia, due to the Yugoslav wars.

[edit] Notable camps

Examples of refugee camps are:

  • Camps in the east of Chad, such as Breidjing Camp, hosting approximately 250,000 refugees from the Darfur region in Sudan [Starting 2002]
  • Camps in the south of Chad, hosting approximately 50,000 refugees from Central African Republic
  • Buduburam refugee camp, home to more than 12,000 Liberians [2] [Opened 1990]
  • Camps for Sri Lanka Tamils, 110,000 in India in 1998, and more than 560,000 internally displaced [Starting 1983]
  • Four camps near Tindouf [Opened circa 1977]
  • Nabatieh camp [Opened 1948, Closed 1991]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links




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