NEWS
Global Report: 41.3 million
people displaced in Nigeria, Ethiopia, others – NRC
Report by the Northeast Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC)
of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) on Friday, said, a total of 41.3 million
people are displaced inside their own countries as a result of conflict and
violence.
A statement from Frankie Parrish, Head of Communications, IDMC for NRC
said, the number of people living in internal displacement worldwide as of the
end of 2018 is the highest it has ever been, according to the Global Report on
Internal Displacement, launched today at the United Nations in Geneva.
“This is an increase of more than a million since the end of 2017 and
two-thirds more than the global number of refugees.
“The record figure is the result of years of cyclical and protracted
displacement, and high levels of new displacement between January and December
2018. IDMC recorded 28 million new internal displacements associated with
conflict, generalised violence and disasters in 2018.” The statement said.
“Ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Syria,
and a rise in inter-communal tensions in Ethiopia, Cameroon and Nigeria’s
Middle Belt region triggered most of the 10.8 million new displacements linked
to conflict and violence. Internally displaced people (IDPs) who tried to
return to their homes in Iraq, Nigeria and Syria during the year found their
property destroyed, infrastructure damaged and basic services non-existent.
“This year’s report is a sad reminder of the recurrence of
displacement, and of the severity and urgency of IDPs’ needs. Many of the same
factors that drove people from their homes now prevent them from returning or
finding solutions in the places they have settled,” said Alexandra Bilak,
IDMC’s director.
“Extreme weather events were responsible for the majority of the 17.2
million new displacements associated with disasters in 2018. Tropical cyclones
and monsoon floods led to mass displacement in the Philippines, China and
India, mostly in the form of evacuations. California suffered the most
destructive wildfires in its history, which displaced hundreds of thousands of
people.
“A number of countries were affected by both conflict and disasters.
Drought in Afghanistan triggered more displacement than the country’s armed
conflict, and the crisis in north-eastern Nigeria was aggravated by flooding
that affected 80 per cent of the country.
“The findings of this report are a wake-up call to world leaders.
Millions of people forced to flee their homes last year are being failed by
ineffective national governance and insufficient international diplomacy.
Because they haven’t crossed a border, they receive pitiful global attention,”
said Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council.
“All displaced people have a right to protection and the international
community has a duty to ensure it.”
“The report shows that internal displacement is an increasingly urban
phenomenon. Warfare in cities such as Dara’a in Syria, Hodeidah in Yemen and
Tripoli in Libya accounted for much of the displacement recorded in the Middle
East in 2018. Urban centres such as Dhaka in Bangladesh are also the preferred
destination for many people fleeing the effects of climate change.
“Such influxes present great challenges for cities and can aggravate
existing risk factors. People who fled fighting in rural areas of Afghanistan
and Somalia faced abject poverty, tenure insecurity and onward displacement
from flooding and evictions in Kabul and Mogadishu.
“New ways of dealing with the issue are emerging in cities from
Medellín in Colombia to Mosul in Iraq, where local governments and communities
have taken the lead.
“The fact that cities have become sanctuary to more and more internally
displaced people represents a challenge for municipal authorities, but also an
opportunity. Leveraging the positive role that local government can play in
finding solutions to displacement will be key to addressing this challenge in
the future,” said Alexandra Bilak.
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