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Cries for survival, justice -- overseas human rights survey

2021-12-13 17:22:09Source: Xinhua
Cries for survival, justice -- overseas human rights survey (Part I)
-- The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that in 2011, the year the so-called "Arab Spring" began, the number of refugees arriving in Europe and dying in the Mediterranean topped 58,000 and 1,500 respectively, the highest level since 2006. -- According to statistics, since 2001, the wars and military operations launched by the United States in the name of "anti-terrorism" have covered about 40 percent of the countries in the world, claiming more than 800,000 lives and displacing more than 38 million people. In Syria alone, by the end of 2020, 13.5 million people were forced to leave their homes, more than half of its population before the war. -- According to the 2020 Annual Misery Index compiled by economist Steve H. Hanke of Johns Hopkins University, countries including Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Lebanon, Libya and Iran were among the countries with the greatest pressure to survive. The internal environment for peaceful development in these countries was often damaged by external interference.
Cries for survival, justice -- overseas human rights survey (Part II)
- Over 4 years after the London Grenfell Tower fire, Nabil Choucair is still fighting for justice for his lost loved ones. The building was of bad quality, but residents' complaints were not listened to, partly for their ethnic minority origins, he believed. - According to a recent survey conducted by Xinhua News Agency, nearly 70 percent of the respondents agree that a sense of gain, security and happiness of the ordinary people is an important indicator of a country's human rights situation. - When asked to rate the happiness of his life from 0 to 10, Choucair, born and raised in London, said "if I had to put a number, it would be in the minus."
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