Next Steps
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
IT could be the television images of sick and starving men, women and children aired around the world, their pathetic faces peering out of the holds of rickety wooden fishing boats that finally convinced the three governments to let them land ashore. For all concerned, however, this is just the beginning of a humanitarian problem that is likely to last for years.
IT could be the television images of sick and starving men, women and children aired around the world, their pathetic faces peering out of the holds of rickety wooden fishing boats that finally convinced the three governments to let them land ashore. For all concerned, however, this is just the beginning of a humanitarian problem that is likely to last for years.
Their arrival and possible resettlement in third countries, are bound to trigger a
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