Voltaire — To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Sub-Saharan African nations account for eight of the 10 fastest growing international migrant populations since 2010
The total number of emigrants worldwide from all sub-Saharan African countries combined grew by 31% between 2010 and 2017, outpacing the rate of increase from both the Asia-Pacific (15%) and Latin America-Caribbean (9%) regions. Some 25 million sub-Saharan migrants lived outside their countries of birth in 2017. The number of international migrants from sub-Saharan Africa between 2010 and 2017 has grown at a higher rate (31%) than in the 2000s (25%) and the 1990s (1%). And as international migration has increased, the breakdown of where sub-Saharan emigrants live has changed. In 1990, 75% of emigrants from the region lived in other sub-Saharan countries, a share that dropped to 68% by 2017. More substantially, the share of sub-Saharan migrants living in European Union countries, Norway and Switzerland rose from 11% in 1990 to 17% in 2017. Looking ahead, the number of international migrants from Africa as a whole is expected to increase in coming decades, due in part to the continent’s growing population.
Send them back while you still can and stop letting new ones in! We don't need a third world Europe.
ReplyDeleteSend them to Israel! The Jews claim to love blacks!
ReplyDeleteGreat post thanks.
ReplyDelete