Brazil Welcomes Palestinian Refugees Barred from Iraq

Palestinians arrive in São Paulo, Brazil Brazil received this Friday, September 21, 35 Palestinian refugees who were staying in camps in the Jordanian desert, at the border between Syria and Iraq, since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime. They had been expelled from Iraq.

Four families, including children and elderly, arrived in Brazil: 25 people went to the state of São Paulo and another 10 to the state of Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost Brazilian state.

Two other groups will be brought next month and in November, totaling 117 people, who answered a questionnaire formulated by the United Nations High Commission for Refugee Affairs (UNHCR).

The secretary general at the Brazilian Ministry of Justice, Luiz Paulo Barreto, said that the Palestinians are going to enjoy the same citizenship rights as Brazilians do. They will receive ID documents, passports – in case they wish to leave Brazil – and will have access to public health and education services.

"Brazil is very welcoming, foreigners who arrive here feel as if they were at home. This applies even to the language, because Brazilians are also able to communicate with immigrants, even through mimicry.

"All of those factors make them feel comfortable, capable of integrating themselves with greater ease. Here, they can also exercise their religious freedom and wear their traditional garments, without being discriminated against," said the secretary.

The representative of UNHCR in Brazil, Luis Varese, informed that total assistance will be provided to the Palestinians, according to their aptitudes. Among them, there are engineers, teachers, merchants, and woodworkers.

Family heads will receive a minimum wage per month, the second person in the family will be granted 75% of the minimum wage, and the remaining family members, 50% of the wage, for up to two years, depending on their adaptation to the labor market.

The Brazilian Ministry of Justice has an annual budget of 680,000 reais (about US$ 365,000) for assistance to refugees. The funds are transferred to the Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) Caritas do Brasil, which, along with the Antônio Vieira Association (Asav) provides assistance to refugees. The cities to which they were forwarded have not been disclosed, so as to avoid public exposure.

Brazil has received the refugees as a part of the Solidary Resettlement Program (Programa de Reassentamento Solidário), of the Ministry of Justice, which has catered to victims of conflicts in Colombia who did not adapt themselves to other countries in the continent.

There are currently around 3,400 refugees in the country, of 69 different nationalities, the vast majority from the African continent.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s 2005 Plans: Beef to 150 Countries

Brazilian producers of cattle beef are going to continue expanding markets in 2005. The ...

Vive Cardoso

Blaming the Americans for the world’s problems will always win applause, especially in France, ...

Brazil Finds 1,222 Locations Along Highways Offering Child Sex

Brazil’s Federal Highway Patrol have found out, in one year, 1,222 places in federal ...

Brazil Looks Beyond Bolivia for Natural Gas

The election of the new governor of the state of Pernambuco, on Sunday, October ...

Brazil Offers World’s First Master’s in Agroenergy Management

The first course specialized in agroenergy in the world is the result of a ...

Illiteracy in Brazil

Lula’s Missed Chance of Cutting Illiteracy in Half in Brazil

In the same month it was confronting its worse political and ethical crisis, the ...

Brazilian Indian Week to Stress Solidarity

The Indigenous Peoples’ Week, which is celebrated every year by the Brazilian Indianist Missionary ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Throws Half a Billion Dollars at World’s Tecnological Race

Brazilian state-controlled oil and gas multinational Petrobras plans on investing more than 1 billion ...

Brazil Has Plenty of Water But 45% of Brazilians Have None

Brazil’s situation is privileged and worrisome at the same time, in the opinion of ...

Brazilian Police Investigate Internet Site Selling Amazon Land

The Brazilian Federal Police is trying to find out who is behind a website ...