W.TN.Orange Blood
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Here's one. The text under the third photo.
From the article you linked:Here's one. The text under the third photo.
So?From the article you linked:
How Are Palestinian Refugees Treated in Egypt?
Egypt, which lies just south of Israel and the Gaza Strip, doesn’t host any Palestinian refugees registered with UNRWA. About 50,000-100,000 Palestinians do live in Egypt but mostly act as an “invisible community,” as Norman and a co-author noted in a recent piece for Inkstick.
The smaller number is tied to Egypt’s complicated history with Palestinian refugees. They were allowed into Egypt starting in 1948 and arrived in larger waves years later, but after the Camp David Accords of 1978 and the assassination of a government official reportedly by a pro-Palestinian faction around the same time, Egyptian laws were changed to remove Palestinians’ right to residency and exclude them from state services, according to the Inkstick article.
“The world system that we live in is one where your rights are derived from your nationality,” says Anne Irfan, a lecturer and expert in displacement with a focus on Palestinian refugee history and the modern Middle East at University College London in the United Kingdom. “And without any need to protect your rights, you're fundamentally vulnerable.”
I asked you a question my man. You plan to answer, or are you going to pretend it's not there?From the article you linked:
How Are Palestinian Refugees Treated in Egypt?
Egypt, which lies just south of Israel and the Gaza Strip, doesn’t host any Palestinian refugees registered with UNRWA. About 50,000-100,000 Palestinians do live in Egypt but mostly act as an “invisible community,” as Norman and a co-author noted in a recent piece for Inkstick.
The smaller number is tied to Egypt’s complicated history with Palestinian refugees. They were allowed into Egypt starting in 1948 and arrived in larger waves years later, but after the Camp David Accords of 1978 and the assassination of a government official reportedly by a pro-Palestinian faction around the same time, Egyptian laws were changed to remove Palestinians’ right to residency and exclude them from state services, according to the Inkstick article.
“The world system that we live in is one where your rights are derived from your nationality,” says Anne Irfan, a lecturer and expert in displacement with a focus on Palestinian refugee history and the modern Middle East at University College London in the United Kingdom. “And without any need to protect your rights, you're fundamentally vulnerable.”
Tell him to take it easy. He's making everyone else look bad.
Yes, we have done so in the past with various nationalities due to war.Would you want a bunch of English, Canadians, or Frenchmen forcibly and permanently "migrated" into the US? Yes or no answer.