US actress Angelina Jolie met Tuesday with some of the 1,200 Iraqis stranded on
the border between Iraq and Syria and appealed for more international support
for those affected by the Iraq conflict.
"I have come to Syria and Iraq to help draw attention to this humanitarian
crisis and to urge governments to increase their support for UNHCR (the UN
refugee agency) and its partners," said Jolie, a goodwill ambassador for the
agency.
"My sole purpose in both countries is to highlight the plight of those uprooted
by the war in Iraq," she added.
Jolie spoke to refugees stuck in Iraq's makeshift Al Waleed camp, and later
watched scores of Iraqis crossing into Syria at a border checkpoint.
"It is absolutely essential that the ongoing debate about Iraq's future includes
plans for addressing the enormous humanitarian consequences these people face,"
she said after visiting the camp.
While in Iraq, Jolie left UNHCR officials to visit privately with US and other
multinational forces based in the area.
Jolie arrived in Syria on Monday, where she spoke to some of the thousands of
Iraqi refugees registering with UNHCR. Nearly one quarter of all Iraqis in Syria
are victims of violence and torture, according to the agency.
It released statistics Tuesday indicating that two million Iraqi refugees have
fled to neighbouring states and 2.2 million have been displaced inside Iraq.
Tens of thousands are now unemployed.
In late July, UNHCR and UNICEF launched a joint 129 million dollar education
appeal aimed at getting 155,000 young Iraqi refugees throughout the Middle East
back into school. The United States announced Tuesday that it will contribute 30
million dollars to the appeal.
(AFP)