United Nations Report on Refugees
Stes de necker
According to the UN, global refugee figures are currently
the highest since WW2.
The number of people living as refugees from war or
persecution exceeded 50 million in 2013, for the first time since World War
Two, the UN says.
The overall figure of 51.2 million is six million higher
than the year before.
According to Antonio Guterres, head of the UNHCR, this rise
was a "dramatic challenge" for aid organisations.
Conflicts in Syria, central Africa and South Sudan fuelled
the sharp increase.
"Conflicts are multiplying, more and more," Mr
Guterres said. "And at the same time old conflicts seem never to
die."
Of particular concern are the estimated 6.3 million people
who have been refugees for years, sometimes even decades.
Internally displaced
People living in what the UN terms "protracted"
refugee situations include more than 2.5 million Afghans. Afghanistan still
accounts for the world's largest number of refugees, and neighbouring Pakistan
is host to more refugees than any other country, with an estimated 1.6 million.
Around the world, thousands of refugees from almost
forgotten crises have spent the best part of their lives in camps. Along
Thailand's border with Burma, 120,000 people from Burma's Karen minority have
lived in refugee camps for more than 20 years.
Refugees should not be forcibly returned, the UN says, and
should not go back unless it is safe to do so, and they have homes to return
to. For many - among them the more than 300,000 mainly Somali refugees in
Kenya's Dadaab camp - that is a very distant prospect.
Some camps, the UN refugee agency admits, have become
virtually permanent, with their own schools, hospitals, and businesses. But
they are not, and can never be, home.
But the world's refugees are far outnumbered by the
internally displaced (IDP) - people who have been forced to flee their homes,
but remain inside their own countries.
The UN says more people are displaced or are becoming
refugees because the world is more violent
In Syria alone there are thought to be 6.5 million displaced
people. The conflict has uprooted many families not once but several times.
Their access to food, water, shelter and medical care is often extremely
limited, and because they remain inside a conflict zone, it is hard for aid
agencies to reach them.
Worldwide, the UN estimates there are now 33.3 million
internally displaced people.
Human cost of war and persecution
51.2m
People forcibly displaced worldwide
2.6m fled Afghanistan
1.6m refugees live in Pakistan
1.2m asylum claims worldwide
Source: UNHCR
Large numbers of refugees and IDPs fleeing to new areas
inevitably put a strain on resources, and can even destabilise a host country.
Throughout the Syrian crisis, Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey
have kept their borders open. Lebanon now hosts more than a million Syrian
refugees, meaning a quarter of its total population is Syrian. The pressure on
housing, education and health is causing tensions in a country which itself has
a recent history of conflict.
The UN is concerned that the burden of caring for refugees
is increasingly falling on the countries with the least resources. Developing
countries are host to 86% of the world's refugees, with wealthy countries
caring for just 14%.
And despite the fears in Europe about growing numbers of
asylum seekers and immigrants, that gap is growing. Ten years ago wealthy
countries hosted 30% of refugees, and developing countries 70%.
Antonio Guterres believes Europe can and should do more.
"I think it's very important that Europe fully assumes
its responsibilities," he said.
"I think it's also clear that we have in Europe good
examples, Sweden, Germany, have taken very generous measures… but we need a
joint expression of European solidarity."
But what frustrates UN aid agencies most of all is being
asked to cope with ever more refugees, while the UN's political arm, the
Security Council, seems unable either to resolve conflicts, or to prevent them
starting.
"The world is becoming more violent, and more people
are being forced to flee," said Mr Guterres, adding that humanitarian
organisations had neither the capacity nor the resources to cope.
"There is no humanitarian solution to these problems…
to see the Security Council paralysed, when all these crises are evolving, is
something that doesn't make sense."
"What frustrates me is the suffering of people, to see
so many innocent people dying, so many innocent people fleeing, so many
innocent people seeing their lives completely broken, and the world being
unable to put an end to this nonsense."
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