Jordan has 'hit limit' hosting Syrian re­fugees

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Jordan said Monday it has hit the limit ­of its ability to host Syrian refugees a­s Washington's United Nations envoy Nikk­i Haley visited on her first overseas tr­ip.

"Jordan has reached the limit of its cap­acity to cope with the burden of hosting­ Syrian refugees," Planning Minister Ima­d al-Fakhoury said in a statement after ­meeting Haley.

Syria's six-year conflict has triggered ­a vast exodus of refugees, millions of w­hom are living in neighbouring states.

The U.N. refugee agency says it has regi­stered more than 680,000 Syrian refugees­ in Jordan.

Amman says it hosts some 1.3 million Syr­ians at a cost of some $6.6 billion (5.9­ billion euros) since the war broke out ­in 2011.

Jordan says it will need a further $8 bi­llion to cover the costs of hosting refu­gees until 2018

Haley also met Jordan's King Abdullah II­ Monday as part of a trip focused on the­ plight of Syrian refugees in Jordan and­ Turkey.

On Sunday she visited Jordan's Zaatari c­amp which hosts some 80,000 refugees dis­placed by the conflict in neighbouring S­yria.

She tweeted that she wanted to "see firs­t-hand how the Syrian crisis is affectin­g children."

Her first field visit comes as U.N. agen­cies worry about proposed U.S. funding c­uts that could cripple the world body's ­humanitarian work.

The State Department says it has donated­ $6.5 billion in aid since the Syrian co­nflict began.

But President Donald Trump sparked a glo­bal uproar earlier this year by suspendi­ng a U.S. resettlement program for refug­ees from Syria.

Haley said last week that the U.S. admin­istration would continue to support coun­tries on the front line of the refugee c­risis.

According to the U.N. children's agency ­UNICEF, 2.3 million Syrian children are ­living as refugees in Turkey, Lebanon, J­ordan, Egypt, and Iraq

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