Fallout From Paris Attacks Lands on Syrian Refugees

Politicians around the globe want to start tightening border policies.

After the death of at least 129 people, some politicians and community leaders everywhere have become even more critical of open-door policies geared toward refugees and economic migrants.

Marie Le Pen, the leader of the right-wing National Front Party in France, called for the closing of mosques and expelling of "radical imams" over Twitter this weekend.

Sweden had started a stricter border-control policy one day before the attacks in Paris, instituting checks and not allowing people to pass through without permitted documentation. France reinstated border controls Friday night, which has started speculation that others will follow suit.

With a harsh winter approaching, Kirk Day, International Rescue Committee's emergency field coordinator, fears there will be a backlog of refugees on the Mediterranean route if countries close their borders or start a more stringent screening process.

"The countries may be incapable of accommodating [the refugees] in a humane way," he told ABC News.

Omar Harjou, a refugee from Kobani, Syria who now lives in a facility in Solingen, Germany, said, “[Shelter staff] tell us, ‘Don’t worry, nothing will change.’”

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