Conflicts and natural disasters left a record nearly 76 million people displaced within their countries last year, with violence in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Middle East driving two-thirds of new movement, a top migration monitoring group said yesterday.
The Internal Displacement Monitoring Center report found that the number of internally displaced people jumped by more than 50 percent over the past five years and roughly doubled in the past decade. It does not cover refugees — displaced people who fled to another country.
The report tracks two major sets of information. It counted 46.9 million physical movements of people last year — sometimes more than once. In most of those cases, such as after natural disasters like floods, people eventually return home.
Photo: AFP
It also compiles the cumulative number of people who were living away from their homes last year, including those still displaced from previous years.
About 75.9 million people were living in internal displacement at the end of last year, the report said, with half of those in sub-Saharan African countries.
Almost 90 percent of the total displacement was attributed to conflict and violence, while about 10 percent stemmed from the impact of natural disasters.
The displacement of more than 9 million people in Sudan at the end of last year was a record for a single country since the center started tracking such figures 16 years ago.
That was an increase of nearly 6 million from the end of 2022. Sudan’s conflict erupted in April last year as soaring tensions between the leaders of the military and the rival Rapid Support Forces broke out into open fighting across the nation.
The group reported a total of 3.4 million movements within Gaza in the final quarter of last year amid the Israeli military response to the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel. That means that many people moved more than once within the territory of about 2.2 million. At the end of the year, 1.7 million people were displaced in Gaza.
Group director Alexandra Bilak said the millions of people forced to flee last year were the “tip of the iceberg,” on top of tens of millions displaced from earlier and continuing conflicts, violence and disasters.
The figures offer a different window into the impact of conflict, climate change and other factors on human movement. The UN refugee agency monitors displacement across borders, but not within countries, while the UN migration agency tracks all movements of people, including for economic or lifestyle reasons.
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