The new chief of the UN refugee agency today said the world should find a fairer formula for sharing the burden of Syria's crisis, including taking in tens of thousands of refugees from overwhelmed regional host nations.
Filippo Grandi, who assumed his post earlier this month, heads an agency grappling with mounting challenges as Syria's five-year-old civil war drags on. Humanitarian aid lags more and more behind growing global needs, including those caused by the Syrian conflict.
More than four million Syrians have fled their homeland, the bulk living in increasingly difficult conditions in neighbouring countries such as Jordan and Lebanon, while hundreds of thousands have flooded into Europe.
Grandi came to Jordan after a stop in Turkey. Later this week, he is due in Lebanon. He visited the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan after meeting with King Abdullah II in the capital, Amman.
His agency, UNHCR, hopes to raise money for refugees at a London pledging conference in February, followed by an international gathering in March in Geneva where countries would commit to taking in more refugees.
"I think we need to be much more ambitious" about resettling refugees, Grandi said. "We are talking about large numbers ... In the tens of thousands."
"What is needed is a better sharing of responsibilities, internationally, for a crisis that cannot only concern the countries neighbouring Syria," he said.
Hundreds of thousands of refugees entered Europe in 2015, often with the help of smugglers who ferried them across the Mediterranean in dangerous voyages.
Grandi said it was time to create legal ways for some refugees to leave overburdened host countries.
Grandi and his Jordanian hosts also discussed a potentially contentious issue the fate of some 17,000 refugees who have amassed on the Syrian-Jordanian border, with numbers rising rapidly in recent months.
They are stranded in a remote desert area, with Jordan only admitting several dozen each day after stringent security checks. UNHCR has warned that the refugees face deteriorating conditions, including lack of adequate shelter.
Jordanian government spokesman Mohammed Momani yesterday said that Jordan believes Islamic State supporters are among the refugees, many of whom fled areas of Syria currently under IS control.
Momani said Jordan's security is a priority, suggesting a change in the current admissions policy is unlikely. He said aid workers are given access to the area and that Jordan will fly the refugees to any country willing to accept them.