Reception of Refugees 1948-1949: Palestinian Refugees fleeing Israel ended up in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Egypt. In Jordan, certain Palestinians were allowed to apply for citizenship, but the majority were not and they were forced to live in Refugee Camps. Those who did not become Jordanian citizens remain refugees and their children remain refugees to this day. Those who did become citizens have an identifier in their passports saying that they are Palestinian (which opens them up to discrimination).
Black September Sept. 1970 to July 1971: A Civil War in Jordan in which around 15,000 Palestinians (militants and civilians) were killed by Jordanian Authorities after the Palestinian pseudo-state that had developed in western Jordan had attempted to assassinate King Hussein. The Palestinians lost and the militants were forcibly evicted.
There was a distinction between Palestinian refugees who fled during the Jewish-Arab Engagement of 1947-1949 and those who fled in later conflicts. The former were usually granted Jordanian citizenship and have become legally inseparable from ethnic Jordanians, except that these citizens have an identifier in their passports saying that they are Palestinian (which opens them up to discrimination). The latter were rounded up in large refugee camps or were allowed to live in Jordan proper, but without proper citizenship or decent work papers, many remaining refugees. Their children have inherited this refugee status and statelessness to this day.
Black September Sept. 1970 to July 1971: A Civil War in Jordan in which around 15,000 Palestinians (militants and civilians) were killed by Jordanian Authorities after the Palestinian pseudo-state that had developed in western Jordan had attempted to assassinate King Hussein. The Palestinians lost and the militants were forcibly evicted.
Jordan welcomed them.
Jordan... I'm positive
Israel and Jordan have allowed certain numbers of Palestinian refugees to become citizens. Also many of the countries outside of the Arab World have granted citizenship to Palestinians through resettlement protocols (such as various European, North American, and South American countries);
Egypt, Israel, and Jordan.
Palestinians were forced out of Palestine and became refugees in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt. It is worth noting that these are the countries with the largest numbers of Palestinian Refugees (excluding the camps in the West Bank and Gaza), but there is a large Palestinian diaspora in Europe, the Arab World (other than these five areas), South America, and North America.
Palestinians were forced out of Palestine and became refugees in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt. It is worth noting that these are the countries with the largest numbers of Palestinian Refugees (excluding the camps in the West Bank and Gaza), but there is a large Palestinian diaspora in Europe, the Arab World (other than these five areas), South America, and North America.
It depends on how you define Palestine. If you define it as the territories under the de facto control of the Palestinian Authority, it only borders Israel. If you consider only the territories of the West Bank, even those under de facto Israeli control, it borders both Israel and Jordan. If you consider all of the Palestinian Territories, also including the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, it borders Israel, Jordan, and Egypt. If you consider the former Mandate of Palestine that many Arabs use when they discuss Palestine replacing Israel, it would border Jordan, Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon (but no Israel since Israel would be gone).
Palestinians were forced out of Palestine and became refugees in Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt. It is worth noting that these are the countries with the largest numbers of Palestinian Refugees (excluding the camps in the West Bank and Gaza), but there is a large Palestinian diaspora in Europe, the Arab World (other than these five areas), South America, and North America.
Terrorist incidents in the 1970s and 1980s occurred as supporters of the Palestinian resistance to several different countries. Probably the most obvious and prominent of these was Israel, but there were also terrorist and paramilitary aggression against the governments in Jordan, Lebanon, Tunisia, and a few other countries in that time period for their treatment of the Palestinian refugees and/or not allowing Palestinian terrorist organizations to freely operate within their boundaries.
Israel, Palestinian territories, Lebanon, and the western parts of Jordan and Syria
YES. Currently, Turkey has over 2.1 million Syrian Refugees, Lebanon has 1.9 million Syrian Refugees, and Jordan has roughly 1 million refugees if the Syrian and Iraqi Refugees in Jordan are added together (ignoring the Palestinian "Refugees" who are Jordanian citizens or have Jordanian residency).
Israel has common borders with:- * Lebanon * Syria * Jordan * Egypt * And the two Palestinian territories, # Gaza # The west bank
It primarily occurred in Israel, Egypt, the Palestinian Territories, Jordan, and Syria.