Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
According to a report issued by the United Nations High Commissioner, at least 123.2 million people or 67 people in the world remains forced.Non-use) Today.
The number of IDPs increased by seven million people or 6 percent compared to the end of 2023. This continues the 13-year trend in the world of IDPs in the world.
However, UNHCR fell into the first four months of this year, the compulsory displacement until the end of April 2025.
“We need to further increase our efforts to create a fragile, wild landscape, for the modern warfare, the modern warfare, and a long-lasting solutions for refugees,” said Filippo Grandi.
Due to the total IDP, conflict, conflict or other crises, 123.2 million is 73.5 million IDPs. This is 6.3 million increase compared to 2023. IDPs (IDPs) are 60 percent of the majority of those who are forced to escape globally.
UN Palestinian Refugee Agency (UNTWA) estimates that more than 90 percent or two million people are expelled as a result of Israel’s sustainable attack in Gaza.
Since 2024, the number of refugees is 42.7 million, and 613,600 decreasing to the previous year. 31 million of this number is under the mandate of the UNHCR, 5.9 million is Palestinian refugees under the Mandate of the Unrwa, and the other is 5.9 million international protection.
According to the UN Gak, in 2024, the number of refugees reflects a smaller assessments of a small number of Afghans and Syrian refugees and to provide information about Ukrainian refugees. However, the number of water refugees increased by about 600,000 to 2.1 million.
The number of asylum seekers – people who want to protect in another country due to the fear of persecution or loss in their homeland – 8.4 million expectations are waiting for 22 million compared to the previous year.
This puts the number of IDPs in one of 67 people in the world.
In 1951, the UN established a refugee convention to protect the rights of refugees in Europe in World War II Day. In 1967, the Convention was expanded to eliminate the displacement in the rest of the world.
There were 2.1 million refugees when the refugee conventions were born. Until 1980, the number of refugees registered by the UN exceeds 10 million for the first time. In the 1980s, the wars in Afghanistan and Ethiopia led to 20 million refugees by 1990.
The number of refugees remained quite consistent in the next two decades.
However, in 2001, Afghanistan was occupied by the United States and in 2003, in 2003, with the civil wars of Iraq South Sudan and Syria, the United States has resulted in refugee numbers by the end of 2021.
The war in Ukraine, which began in 2022, has led to one of the fastest growing refugee crises since World War II, forced to escape Ukraine with 5.7 million people in less than a year. At the end of 2023, six million Ukrainians were removed.
Over the past 10 years, in the last 10 years, has doubled with a steep slope since 2020. Among the Sudanese Army and Suhalitarian rapid support forces, in the end of 2024, 50.3 million water, before 3.5 million people.
In 2024, more IDPs were Sudanli (14.3 million), Syrian (13.5 million), Afghan (10.5 million) or Ukraine (8.8 million).
In 2024, 1.6 million refugees returned to their homes.
“However, many of these refugees, despite the fragile situations, Syria, South Sudan or Ukraine,” Matthew Saltmarsh, UNHCR media leader, “returns to the places of conflict or instability, ideal and often unstable.”
In 2024, 8.2 million IDs returned to the areas of origin.
10 UNHCRAs and IDPs returned to eight countries included in the Afghan, Democratic Republic, Ethiopia, Lebanon, Myanchor, South Sudan, Syria and Ukraine.
“Great IDPs during the year, the same time was registered in several countries with significant new displacements such as DRC (2.4 million), Myanmar (378,000), Syria (514,000), Ukraine (782,000),” Saltmarsh “.
“Even in the destructive cuts, we have seen some of the rays of hope for the last six months,” he said. “About two million Syrians were able to return home after a year. The country remains fragile and people need our help to rebuild their lives again.”