Persian Gulf states failure to resettle Syrian refugee is one side of the facts and other side is this countries invest as much as they can on armed Group trying to oust Syrian government in which this armed struggle made many destruction and forced many people to flee.
In fact this countries by the participation of some other players like Turkey are the roots of Syrian crisis but did nothing to help the victims of theirs plots against Syrian people.
Syria's supporters in the U.N. Security Council, China and Russia, have also failed to resettle any refugees since the crisis began more than three years ago, Amnesty said in a report ahead of a U.N. pledging conference for Syria in Geneva next week, Reuters reports.
More than 3 million Syrians are being hosted in just five neighbouring countries: Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq and Egypt, placing an enormous strain on resources.
The rest of the world has offered to take just 63,170 refugees. "The shortfall in the number of resettlement places for refugees offered by the international community is truly shocking," Sherif Elsayed-Ali, Amnesty's head of refugee rights, said in a statement."
The complete absence of resettlement pledges from the Persian Gulf states is particularly shameful. Linguistic and religious ties should place the Persian Gulf states at the forefront of those offering safe shelter to refugees fleeing war in Syria.
"Nearly 380,000 people have been identified as in need of resettlement by the U.N. refugee agency. They include survivors, unaccompanied children and people requiring medical treatment.
Within the European Union, Germany has pledged to resettle 30,000 refugees, Amnesty said.The next five largest EU countries have offered just 2,000 places between them.
The lack of international support has left the main host countries struggling to cope and refugees are facing increasing hostility as a result.
Attacks against Syrians have surged in Lebanon, while in Jordan locals are complaining about competition for jobs. Both countries, along with Turkey, have tightened their borders in recent months.
Amnesty wants at least 5 percent of Syria's refugees to be resettled by the end of 2015.It said that despite financial pledges for U.N. aid efforts from rich countries like Britain, United States and Kuwait, money alone was not enough.