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);
Jordan... I'm positive
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.
Answer this question… The citizens of a country should be allowed to decide how that country is governed.
The answer used to be Syria. However, given the Syrian Civil War, many Iraqi refugees have fled Syria. Jordan is probably a better answer now, even though it lacks a large number of Iraqi refugees.
The citizens of a country should be allowed to decide how that country is governed.
There were many causes for the Lebanese Civil War, but the greatest was likely the attempts of the PLO and other Palestinian Militant Organizations to coopt (through violence) the Lebanese Government to gain increased support for Palestinian Refugees in the country.
Lebanon currently has a population of 4.1 million citizens, 400,000 Palestinian Refugees (who are denied citizenship even though almost all of them were born in Lebanon), and 1.3 million Syrian Refugees. Unfortunately, as the situation in Syria continues to deteriorate, it is expected that Lebanon will accommodate between 1.6-1.7 million Syrian Refugees by 2015. This surge in population is overtaxing the country's very limited resources.
Answer this question… The citizens of a country should be allowed to decide how that country is governed.
In general refugees are from the country from which they have fled.
Important Note:The first thing that should be made clear is that "refugee" in the Palestinian case has a different definition than in all other cases. Palestinians inherit refugee status, even if they never fled anywhere in their lives as long as an ancestor did; this is defined by UNRWA. For all other peoples, refugee status terminates when the people are settled; this is defined by UNHCR.Numbers:It is estimated that between 30,000 to 50,000 of the original Palestinian refugees (e.g. refugee under the normal international UNHCR definition) are alive today. As for the special Palestinian UNRWA definition, there are an estimated 5 million Palestinian refugees (including 50,000 original refugees).Since the UNHCR tries to settle refugees (and then take them off the list), the current numbers indicate those who are not yet settled. The UNHCR estimates that there are roughly 18-19 million refugees. UNHCR also estimates that there are roughly 32-33 million Internally Displaced Persons or IDPs. An IDP is a refugee who is still within the borders of his home-country as opposed to "normal" refugees who have fled their home-countries. The reason that the number of IDPs is nearly twice the number of refugees is because the UNHCR is not allowed to help IDPs resettle in the same way that they can help refugees.If we take the 50,000 number for the amount of actual Palestinians who are refugees and do not count IDPs, Palestinians make up 0.278% of the world's refugees.If we take the whole 5 million UNRWA Palestinian Refugee Count and the whole UNHCR Refugee and IDP count, Palestinians make up 8.929% of all the world's refugees.
Lebanon is the country in question. Eventually, the arrival of the Palestinian Liberation Organization in the early 1970s resulted in the Lebanese Civil War between Shiites, Lebanese Sunnis, Palestinian Sunnis, and Maronite Christians and saw Israeli and Syrian forces as well.
After its isolationism, Japan became an imperialist country. Japanese citizens who left Japan were banned from returning. Japanese citizens were not allowed to leave the country.