Is there a girl in any refugee camp called Nani Mkpa from Cote d'ivoire?
this woman is the worst woman in the world. she is the most cheating person in the world.
Why did people emigrate from nicaragua?
Because of the Sandinista revolution in 1979, presided by Daniel Ortega, who ruled the country with an iron fist. This government started confiscating properties, imprisoning anyone who was against there socialist beliefs. They stole companies, farms, lands, houses and put you away in prison just because a person was wealthy, or "burgueses" as they like to call people with affluential people. Thanks to this, now a hand full of high ranking sandinista officials are the richest social class in the country, governing the second poorest country in america and one of the most corrupt in the world.
Is orphanage home where refugee are in st john catholic church in Dakar Senegal?
It is a scam, please report it as spam immediately, and do not respond.
If you get mail or email about refugee Catholic anything or orphanage home or anything else in Dakar Senegal, it is spam, they are trying to get money, your email address, anything. Do not reply, nor answer, just report it to the authorities.
It would appear not, it would appear, from various searches, that most of the mail coming from Dakar Senegal claiming to be Catholic Churches are scams. If you get any such mail or email, please report it at once and do not respond to it.
There may well be, but the information on specific Churches in Dakar Senegal is not on the web; HOWEVER, there is a huge amount of information on SPAM and other con-artists that use Catholic Church in Dakar, be very careful.
Palestinian refugee camps were established after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War to accommodate Palestinian refugees who fled from the war.Refugee camp for Rwandans locatedin what is now the eastern Democratic Republic
Do UK travel document refugee from Zimbabwe need a visa for Zambia?
anyone visiting the UK needs a visa. just go online.
Can Jewish people always emigrate to Israel?
According to the Israeli Law of Return, the answer is yes. Despite the difficult logistics involved, Israel accepts many thousands of Jews each year, who immigrate from all over the world.
It is worth noting that prior to the Establishment of the State of Israel, Jewish immigration to Israel was highly regulated and often illegal.
Is there a refugee camp called Yorff Kongo Villa in Dakar Senegal?
What there is, is a scam. People are scamming good hearted - or greedy - folks into sending money so that they can "be free" or "get access to large amounts of money".
It's a 419 scam, or what used to be known as "The Spanish Prisoner".
There are several refugee and displaced person camps in and around Dakar.
There is currently a scam (internet, mail) concerning a claimed refugee camp, designed to elicit money from individuals to help someone at an alleged camp. That may or may not be to what you refer in your question. You should not send any funds to individuals who make such approaches.
Have you received an email from a person (specially a girl) who claimed he/she is residing in a refugee camp in Dakar, Senegal? I ensure you it's a scam and there is no camp in Senegal. That person is a swindler.
I wouldn't think so because Senegal as a country isn't economically strong enough to support itself.
There is a "sweetheart scam" that involves a man or woman claiming to be from a refugee camp and wishing for a "pen pal". At some point then, the "refugee" then speaks of getting an inheritance or some other money, and just needs a "little" money from you to get at it, or leave the camp. A Spanish Prisoner/419 scam, with the "sweetheart" part thrown in to put you off your guard.
Don't send any money or give out any personal information.
Have you received an email from a person (specially a girl) who claimed he/she is residing in a refugee camp in Dakar, Senegal? I ensure you it's a scam and there is no camp in Senegal. That person is a swindler.
What is a refugee coming to Australia?
For many different reasons - sometimes because they are escaping war, persecution or natural disaster in their home countries, sometimes because of economic opportunities, sometimes because their ethnic group or religion is discriminated against in their home country.
Do travel document refugee passport Geneva convention 1951 need visa for Austria?
Travel document refugee passport convention 1951 need visa for Austria?
Am a Refugee In South Africa Do you need a Passport and Visa to travel to Canada?
yes south African citizen need a visa to visit Canada
Does bankruptcy affect your ability to emigrate to New Zealand?
Call NZ Immigration from USA at 64-9-914-4100 and ask them about current requirements. As of now, they claim it could be an issue under the "Character" section of the application. However, that tends to be more focused on wehther or not you have committed crimes and have spent time in jail. So, he suggested when you fill out the Expression of Interest to make sure you don't hide information, but that it shouldn't be an issue.
Can anyone apply for immigration to Canada as a refugee?
Not everyone can apply for immigration as a refugee. Refugees and people needing protection are those in or outside Canada who fear returning to their home country. In keeping with its humanitarian tradition and international obligations, Canada provides protection to thousands of people every year.
Canada offers refugee protection to people in Canada who fear of persecution or who may be at risk of torture or cruel and unusual treatment or punishment, and are unwilling or unable to return to their home country.
Groups and individuals can sponsor refugees from abroad who qualify to come to Canada.
Do travel document refugee passport Geneva convention 1951 need visa for southafrica?
Do travel document refugee passport genova convention 1951 need visa for dubai?
Do a refugee travel document of Belgium need a visa to Canada?
Italy travel document holder refugee need visit visa for Canada?
Why have so many Eastern European Jews chosen to emigrate?
There are a number of reasons for the Jewish departure from Eastern Europe from the mid-1700s up to the mid-1900s.
1) Border Changes: There were numerous wars in Eastern Europe which lead to some countries (like Poland) expanding to huge sizes before being completely removed from the map. This nearly constant map-rewriting made many Jews flee the oncoming battles and resettle elsewhere.
2) Religious Intolerance: Eastern Europe had a mix of Catholics (who were dominant in Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary), Orthodox (who were dominant in Russia, Serbia, and Greece), and Jews (who settled throughout). Religious tensions were common and religious adherence was enforced brutally, especially in Yugoslav States and the Austrian Empire in general. Jews were targeted especially because they were believed by both the Orthodox and the Catholics to be heretics and unable to properly integrate.
3) Ottoman Invasion: When the Ottomans came and conquered the entirety of southeast Europe, many Europeans fled the Ottoman occupation because of fear as to how they would live under the Turks. (Admittedly it turned out that Turkish Occupation was better for the Jews than what they had before, but the fear of what it could be was the dominant factor in their decisions.) Many Jews, like their Christian neighbors, fled north to escape the Ottomans.
4) Economic Pressures: Eastern European land was difficult for many to farm. It did not provide a warm climate or adequate resources to really build the massive farming successes found in Western Europe (with the possible exception of the Ukraine). As a result, the famines encouraged many to seek a livelihood elsewhere.
5) Nazism: Over 5 million Jews in Eastern Europe were exterminated during the Holocaust by the Nazi Einsatzgruppen, the Final Solution, Starvation in Ghettos, and other atrocities perpetrated during the Holocaust. (Note: Around 1 million Jews killed came from other regions, which is the difference between this number and the traditional 6 million.) These individuals were incapable of freely departing and were slaughtered.
Why did the US not let many Jews Emigrate from Germany?
The US considered them to be inferior, along with eastern and southern Europeans, there were tighter quotas on these people than others because they believed in the theories of eugenics that said that they were lesser people.
What questions would you ask a refugee?
Was it scary during the ww2.
What thoughts were you thinking, like did you think you were going to survive
Where did the Irish emigrate to in the 1800s?
More often than not, yes, the Irish often had to settle in the slums. In cities in the North, like New York City, the Irish were normally too poor to own their own homes. Areas like Lowers Manhattans "Five Points" were home to many slums and in those slums were many poor Irish immigrant's. In the South, though most Irish immigrants did not settle there, the Irish were not necessarily in slums, however, they did not typically lead happy lives. Often in the South, Irish people were hired to do jobs that were considered too dangerous to have slaves do.
Technically, no.
Related Information:
He did come to America in 1933, to avoid persecution due to his faith (he was a Jew). He made the decision to relocate to a better life, and the US, was happy to have him.
He was already a world-renowned physicist and Nobel laureate, whose presence brought fame, respect, and admiration to Austria and Germany. He also had some wealth, and a job offer from Princeton University, which he accepted.
He was not among those tragic choice-less people, that by popular norms were considered to be refugees, fleeing behind a pushcart, filled with the meager remnants of their belongings. However, he certainly found it prudent to relocate in order to avoid the persecution brought by the ethnic and political excesses that were taking place in Europe, and especially Germany, at that time.
Had he left Germany after 1951, when the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, Article 1.A.2, adopted the following definition:
[A]ny person who: owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for
reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social
group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and
is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the
protection of that country.";
Then, by these later standards, he would have been considered a refugee.
Why did the English emigrate to Colonial America?
Some came to build a new life. Others came to make their fortunes. Many came to escape poverty; the living conditions in England were terrible for the poor. Some came as prisoners who were sent to Georgia on parole. Many came as indentured servants of the upper classes.
He would not have to return them to slave holders in the south
Under the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees of 1951, a refugee is more narrowly defined (in Article 1.A.2) as a person who:
"owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country".
How did the potato blight lead to mass Irish emigration?
The potato famine caused a lot of hardship for the native people of Ireland as potatoes were their staple food.
Most of the other food they grew was sent to Britain as the Irish were under their rule.
As a result many people died and left because of the hunger and disease created by the potato blight.
They were willing to risk the long boat journey from Ireland to other countries just to get away from their plight.
Why did the US refused to let the St. Louis dock in the US and allow its passengers to emigrate?
MS St. Louis.
The ship sailed transatlantic routes, from Hamburg to New York, but during the Great Depression turned to cruising to make revenue. The ship is most notable for a single voyage in 1939, which was dramatised in the 1976 motion picture Voyage of the Damned.
The German propaganda ministry and the Nazi party conceived of a propaganda exercise which would demonstrate that Germany was not alone in its territorial, exclusionary hostility towards Jews as a permanent minority within the political economy of their state. The German propagandists wanted to demonstrate that the "civilized" world agreed with their assertion that Jews constituted a continuing "hidden-hand" of influence on national and economic affairs. They wanted to demonstrate that no other Western country or people would receive Jews as refugees. Firstly it would appear that the Nazis were allowing the Jewish refugees a new life in Havana
The Nazis were aware of rising western antisemitism and correctly surmised that these Jews, traveling on tourist visas (not immigrant visas, which none of the potential host countries would likely have issued to them), would not be able to visit Cuba as tourists when in fact they were political/social refugees; who, for whatever reason, had been forcibly removed from Germany, their home country. Furthermore, having been refused entry into Cuba and other Atlantic nations, the plight of the refugees would force the world to admit that there was, as the Nazis characterized it, a "Jewish problem" that Germany, for all to see, was trying to resolve "humanely."
With not one of the countries of the Northern Atlantic basin allowing the Jewish passengers entry, those countries would be in no position in the future to morally object when Germany dealt with its problem Jewish population. The St. Louis sailed out of Hamburg into the Atlantic Ocean in May 1939 carrying one non-Jewish and 936 (mainly German) Jewish refugees seeking asylum from Nazi persecution just before World War II. However, on the ship's arrival in Cuba, the passengers were refused either tourist entry (which in theory was valid for their tourist visas) or political asylum (which was not the stated purpose for which the tourist visas had been issued) by the Cuban government under Federico Laredo Brú. This prompted a near mutiny. Two people attempted suicide and dozens more threatened to do the same. However, 29 of the refugees were able to disembark at Havana.
On 4 June 1939, the St. Louis was also refused permission to unload on orders of President Roosevelt as the ship waited in the Caribbean Sea between Florida and Cuba. Initially, Roosevelt showed limited willingness to take in some of those on board despite the Immigration Act of 1924, but vehement opposition came from Roosevelt's Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, and from Southern Democrats-some of whom went so far as to threaten to withhold their support of Roosevelt in the 1940 Presidential election if this occurred.
The St. Louis then tried to enter Canada but was denied as well.
The ship sailed for Europe, first stopping in the United Kingdom, where 288 of the passengers disembarked and were thus spared from the Holocaust. The remaining 619 passengers disembarked at Antwerp; 224 were accepted into France, 214 into Belgium and 181 into the Netherlands, safe from Hitler's persecution until the German invasions of these countries.[5][6]
The ship without the passengers eventually sailed back to Hamburg, Germany. By using the survival rates for Jews in these countries, Thomas and Morgan-Witts estimated that 180 of the St. Louis refugees in France, along with 152 of those in Belgium and 60 of those in Holland survived the Holocaust, giving a total of 709 estimated survivors and 227 killed of the original 936 Jewish refugees.
Later, more detailed research by Scott Miller and Sarah Ogilvie of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum has given a slightly higher total of deaths:
Of the 620 St. Louis passengers who returned to continental Europe, we determined that eighty-seven were able to emigrate before Germany invaded western Europe on May 10, 1940. Two hundred and fifty-four passengers in Belgium, France and the Netherlands after that date died during the Holocaust. Most of these people were murdered in the killing centers of Auschwitz and Sóbibor; the rest died in internment camps, in hiding or attempting to evade the Nazis. Three hundred sixty-five of the 620 passengers who returned to continental Europe survived the war.