@tf1Groupie
Réponse à votre question sur le nombre de réfugiés syriens en Russie.
Les Russes savent à qui ils ont affaire et ne veulent pas entendre parler de guerre ethnique et religieuse importée.
Ils ont déjà l’expérience du Caucase.
https://www.rt.com/politics/russia-syrian-refugees-asylum-631/
Over 1,000 people from civil war-torn Syria have received
temporary asylum in Russia, the head of the asylum department of the
Federal Migration Service has said.
A total number of Syrians who have officially applied for refuge
in Russia is over 1,200, Vladimir Rucheikov said at gathering of
the Presidential Council for Human Rights. His agency makes
decisions about Syrian refugees mainly on humanitarian grounds,
and he noted Syria is an unsafe place to live in.
In January this year, Olga Kirillova of the Moscow City
Directorate of the Federal Migration Service told the press that
the number of Syrians seeking asylum in Russia was rising.
In December 2013, the agency had to refute media reports about a
mass deportation of Syrians from Russia. The head of the Federal
Migration Service, Konstantin Romodanovsky, emphasized that his
people had to observe the law and only granted asylum to those
who had sufficient grounds for it. He did not give any concrete
figures.
In October 2013, the Russian Foreign Ministry reported that it
received a letter from a 50,000-strong group of Syrian Christians
who asked to be granted Russian citizenship.
"Since Syrian law allows dual citizenship, we have decided to
seek citizenship of the Russian Federation if this is possible.
Russian citizenship would be an honor for any Syrian Christian
who wished to acquire it," reads the letter, which was
posted on the ministry’s website.
The applicants noted that their move was not a demonstration of
mistrust in the Syrian army or government. They claimed that they
feared “the conspiracy of the West and hateful fanatics who
are waging a brutal war against our country."
"We see the Russian Federation as a powerful factor of global
peace and stability. Russia pursues a firm line in the defense of
Syria, its people and its territorial integrity," the letter
reads.
A short time later, the Foreign Ministry replied that granting
citizenship was not within its field, adding that it would
provide help to Syrians in the form of humanitarian aid and
accommodation of refugees.
The Federal Migration Service commented that it cannot work with
such large groups and suggested that the authors of the letter
apply for asylum individually.
Meanwhile, the US has announced that it is relaxing its own rules
towards Syrian refugees. The new rules grant exemptions on a case
by case basis when it comes to “material support,”
Reuters reported. It was previously impossible for any refugee
that had provided support to armed rebels to come to the US, even
if those groups were supported by Washington.
Only 31 Syrian refugees out of approximately 2.3 million were
allowed to come to the US in the fiscal year that ended in
October.