2015 to see record number of forced displacements: UN
2015 to see record number of forced displacements: UN
Fri Dec 18, 2015 9:39AM
This image, taken on
December 4, 2015, shows a refugees girl crying on the border crossing
near the Macedonian town of Gevgelija, near Greece. (Photo by AFP)
The United Nations (UN) says
the number of people forcibly displaced worldwide in 2015 is on its way
to surpassing a previous record of almost 60 million.
In a
report released Friday, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
said the number of refugees and displaced people will most likely go
above the total figure at the end of 2014, which was 59.5 million.
“2015
is on track to see worldwide forced displacement exceeding 60 million
for the first time - 1 in every 122 humans is today someone who has been
forced to flee their homes,” the report said.
The UN estimate
includes the 20.2 million refugees fleeing war and persecution, in
particular, those fleeing the protracted Syrian conflict, which began in
2011.
Nearly 2.5 million of these refugees have requests pending,
with Germany, Russia and the United States receiving the highest
numbers of new claims lodged in the first half of the year, it said.
An estimated 34 million people were internally displaced as of mid-year, about 2 million more than the same period in 2014.
Yemen,
on which Saudi Arabia launched military attacks in March, reported the
highest number of newly uprooted people at 933,500. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres (Photo by AFP)The report warned about the growing “resentment” toward refugees, especially on the European continent.
“Never
has there been a greater need for tolerance, compassion and solidarity
with people who have lost everything,” Antonio Guterres, the UN high
commissioner for refugees, said in a statement. The foreign-fueled
conflict in Syria has been the main driver of mass displacement, with
more than 4.2 million Syrian refugees having fled abroad and 7.6 million
uprooted within their shattered homeland as of mid-year, the UNHCR
said. Worldwide displacements Together,
refugees from Syria and Ukraine, where pro-Russia fighters in the east
have demanded more autonomy from Kiev since last year, accounted for
half of the 839,000 people who became refugees in the first half of
2015, the UMHCR said. Violence in Afghanistan, Somalia and South
Sudan sparked large refugee movements, and so did fighting in Burundi,
the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and
Iraq. Voluntary returns – a measure of how many refugees can
safely go back home – are at their lowest levels in more than three
decades, with only 84,000 people returning by mid-year against 107,000
in the same time a year before, the UN agency said. Many refugees will live in exile for years to come, it said.