UN: Global displacement toll beyond 80M as more people flee 2020 conflicts

UN says conflicts in Syria, Africa's central Sahel region, DRC, Mozambique, Somalia, and Yemen continue to uproot people, arguing displacements will grow "unless world leaders stop wars."

A woman who fled from attacks of armed militants in the Sahel region walks with her children at a camp for internally displaced people in Kaya, Burkina Faso on November 23, 2020.
Reuters

A woman who fled from attacks of armed militants in the Sahel region walks with her children at a camp for internally displaced people in Kaya, Burkina Faso on November 23, 2020.

UN has said its preliminary figures suggest that more people have been forced to flee violence and persecution in 2020, pushing the number beyond last year's 80 million, despite calls for ceasefires and compassion amid the Covid-19 pandemic. 

"We are now surpassing another bleak milestone that will continue to grow unless world leaders stop wars," UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi said on Wednesday in a statement.

By the end of 2019, 79.5 million people were living uprooted and displaced, including nearly 30 million refugees — more than one percent of the world's population, the UN said.

READ MORE: UN predicts record 235M people will need relief in 2021 because of pandemic

Global ceasefire call not heeded

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called in March for a global ceasefire while the world fights the pandemic, which has now killed more than 1.5 million people.

But while some factions heeded the call, UNHCR said preliminary figures through the first half of 2020 showed that violence in Syria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique, Somalia and Yemen drove fresh displacement.

Africa's central Sahel region also saw significant new displacement due to brutal violence, including rape and executions, UNHCR said.

"With forced displacement doubling in the last decade, the international community is failing to safeguard peace," Grandi lamented.

READ MORE: Ethiopia's forces shoot at, detain UN team in Tigray

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Virus worsened challenges

The UN agency pointed out that instead of calming conflict, the coronavirus crisis had "disrupted every aspect of human life and severely worsened existing challenges for the forcibly displaced and stateless."

It pointed out that some of the measures to curb the spread of Covid-19 had made it more difficult for refugees to reach safety.

At the peak of the first wave of transmission back in April, for instance, 168 countries fully or partially closed their borders, including 90 that made no exception for people seeking asylum.

Since then though, 111 countries have found "pragmatic solutions" to ensure asylum processes can remain functional, UNHCR said.

Despite this, new asylum applications dropped by a third during the first half of the year compared to the same period in 2019.

At the same time, the number of vulnerable refugees resettled to third countries was slashed in half, to just 17,400 in the first half of the year.

READ MORE: Tigray conflict: Nearly 100,000 refugees have run out of food in Ethiopia

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