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Victims until today

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AGPS Issues Statistical Report 14 on the Death Toll, Detainees, and Displaced Palestinian Refugees in Syria until September 2016

Published : 26-10-2016

AGPS Issues Statistical Report 14 on the Death Toll, Detainees, and Displaced Palestinian Refugees in Syria until September 2016

The London-based AGPS issued on October 25, 2016 its 14th statistical report entitled “Detailed Statistics on the Number of Victims, Detainees, and Displaced Palestinian Refugees in Syria until September 2016”.

The report is another chain in a series of documentary studies conducted by AGPS in an attempt to unveil the tragedy endured by the Palestinian refugee community in Syria. It is pided into three major parts with a number of sub-parts each. The first chapter covers the death toll and number of detainees since the outbreak of the Syrian conflict in March 2011 until September 2016. The report documented the death of 3,357 Palestinian-Syrian refugees mostly due to shelling, hostilities, torture, and the blockade. Others drowned as they put out to see on way to Europe, fleeing war-torn Syria via the so-dubbed “death-boats”. AGPS also kept record of 1,108 Palestinian detainees, including 77 women, in Syrian lock-ups.

The second chapter provides statistics on the fallouts of the third quarter of 2016. 82 Palestinians were killed during this period, including two outside of Syria, down from 84 victims in the second quarter of 2016.

Chapter III presents statistics on the number and geographical distribution of Palestinian refugees in Syria’s neighboring countries and the European Union for the period between 2011 and 2016. The overall number of Palestinian-Syrian refugees who fled to Europe for the period from 2011 to January 2016 is estimated at 80,000.

The report is purely fact-based and rooted in accurate data compiled by AGPS on-the-spot correspondents. The data is backed up by meticulous references to the spatio-temporal distribution of the victims and detainees, along with their gender, age, and status (civilian-military).

AGPS reports aim to mobilize international support for the Palestinian refugees’ cause by urging the UN and the human rights bodies to take up their responsibilities and seriously work on providing legal and physical protection for the refugees.

To download the electronic version of the report:

http://actionpal.org.uk/ar/reports/special/sta14_2016.pdf

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/4105

The London-based AGPS issued on October 25, 2016 its 14th statistical report entitled “Detailed Statistics on the Number of Victims, Detainees, and Displaced Palestinian Refugees in Syria until September 2016”.

The report is another chain in a series of documentary studies conducted by AGPS in an attempt to unveil the tragedy endured by the Palestinian refugee community in Syria. It is pided into three major parts with a number of sub-parts each. The first chapter covers the death toll and number of detainees since the outbreak of the Syrian conflict in March 2011 until September 2016. The report documented the death of 3,357 Palestinian-Syrian refugees mostly due to shelling, hostilities, torture, and the blockade. Others drowned as they put out to see on way to Europe, fleeing war-torn Syria via the so-dubbed “death-boats”. AGPS also kept record of 1,108 Palestinian detainees, including 77 women, in Syrian lock-ups.

The second chapter provides statistics on the fallouts of the third quarter of 2016. 82 Palestinians were killed during this period, including two outside of Syria, down from 84 victims in the second quarter of 2016.

Chapter III presents statistics on the number and geographical distribution of Palestinian refugees in Syria’s neighboring countries and the European Union for the period between 2011 and 2016. The overall number of Palestinian-Syrian refugees who fled to Europe for the period from 2011 to January 2016 is estimated at 80,000.

The report is purely fact-based and rooted in accurate data compiled by AGPS on-the-spot correspondents. The data is backed up by meticulous references to the spatio-temporal distribution of the victims and detainees, along with their gender, age, and status (civilian-military).

AGPS reports aim to mobilize international support for the Palestinian refugees’ cause by urging the UN and the human rights bodies to take up their responsibilities and seriously work on providing legal and physical protection for the refugees.

To download the electronic version of the report:

http://actionpal.org.uk/ar/reports/special/sta14_2016.pdf

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/4105