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Global forced displacement hits record 122M : UNHCR

Greenwatch Desk International 2025-06-12, 9:24pm

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The number of people forcibly displaced worldwide reached a record 122.1 million by the end of April this year, up from 120 million at the same time last year, said UN Refugee Agency’s (UNHCR) on Wednesday (June 12).


According to the UNHCR Global Trends Report, it said the rise reflects around a decade of year-on-year increases driven by ongoing conflicts, notably in Sudan, Myanmar and Ukraine, along with the persistent failure to halt fighting.

Filippo Grandi, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said, “We are living in a time of intense volatility in international relations, with modern warfare creating a fragile, harrowing landscape marked by acute human suffering. We must redouble our efforts to search for peace and find long-lasting solutions for refugees and others forced to flee their homes.” 

Forcibly displaced people include people becoming homeless within their own country by conflict, which grew sharply by 6.3 million to 73.5 million at the end of 2024, and refugees fleeing their countries (42.7 million people).

Sudan became the world’s largest displacement crisis with 14.3 million refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs), overtaking Syria (13.5 million), followed by Afghanistan (10.3 million) and Ukraine (8.8 million).

The report found that, contrary to widespread perceptions in wealthier regions, 67 per cent of refugees stay in neighbouring countries, with low and middle-income countries hosting 73 per cent of the world’s refugees. Indeed, 60 per cent of people forced to flee never leave their own country. 

While the number of forcibly displaced people has almost doubled in the last decade, funding for UNHCR now stands at roughly the same level as in 2015 amid brutal and ongoing cuts to humanitarian aid, it said.

This situation is untenable, leaving refugees and others fleeing danger even more vulnerable, mentioned the report. 

“Even amid the devastating cuts, we have seen some rays of hope over the last six months,” Grandi added. “Nearly 2 million Syrians have been able to return home after over a decade uprooted. The country remains fragile, and people need our help to rebuild their lives again.”

In total, 9.8 million forcibly displaced people returned home in 2024, including 1.6 million refugees (the most for more than two decades) and 8.2 million IDPs (the second highest ever). 

Many of these returns, however, happened in an adverse political or security climate. For example, a large number of Afghans were forced to return to Afghanistan in 2024, arriving home in desperate conditions.

In countries like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, and South Sudan, there were significant new forced displacements at the same time as the return of refugees and IDPs. 

The report called for continued funding of UNHCR programmes that save lives, assist refugees and IDPs returning home, and reinforce basic infrastructure and social services in host communities, as an essential investment in regional and global security, reports UNB.