What is behind the biggest surge in internal displacement ever recorded?

Special What is behind the biggest surge in internal displacement ever recorded?
climate-related disasters in different parts of the world, continue to drive millions from their homes. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 June 2025

What is behind the biggest surge in internal displacement ever recorded?

What is behind the biggest surge in internal displacement ever recorded?
  • Aid agencies have recorded an unprecedented rise in displacement within countries across every global region
  • More than 83 million people were internally displaced by the end of 2024 — the highest figure ever documented

DUBAI: The world is witnessing a historic surge in displacement — not across borders, but within them. Ongoing conflicts in Gaza and Sudan, coupled with the escalating frequency and intensity of climate-related disasters, continue to drive millions from their homes.

By the end of 2024, more than 83.4 million people in the world were internally displaced — the highest number yet recorded.

According to the 2025 Global Report on Internal Displacement, that figure has nearly doubled in just six years — the equivalent of displacing the entire population of Germany.

More broadly, the latest figures from UNHCR’s Global Trends Report 2025 show that the total number of forcibly displaced people worldwide — including refugees, asylum seekers, and those internally displaced — had reached 122.1 million by the end of April 2025, up from 120 million the year before.

“We are living in a time of intense volatility in international relations, with modern warfare creating a fragile, harrowing landscape marked by acute human suffering,” said Filippo Grandi, the UN high commissioner for refugees, responding to the figures.

“We must redouble our efforts to search for peace and find long-lasting solutions for refugees and others forced to flee their homes.”

While Grandi highlighted the urgent need for global solutions, experts tracking internal displacement say the crisis is becoming increasingly entrenched within national borders.

“Internal displacement is where conflict, poverty, and climate collide, hitting the most vulnerable the hardest,” Alexandra Bilak, director of the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center, said in a statement.

The latest figures reveal internal displacement is no longer just a humanitarian issue, she said, but a complex political and development challenge that continues to be overlooked.

“The data is clear — it’s now time to use it to prevent displacement, support recovery, and build resilience,” Bilak said.

The global surge in internal displacement was felt across every region in 2024, according to the Global Report on Internal Displacement.

An internally displaced person is someone forced to flee their home to escape conflict, persecution, or disaster. But unlike refugees, they remain within their country’s borders.

Sub-Saharan Africa is the epicenter of this global surge, home to 38.8 million internally displaced persons — making up almost 46 percent of the global total.

All 23 countries in the region that experienced conflict-related displacement also suffered from disaster-induced movements, compounding already dire humanitarian needs.

In the Middle East and North Africa, conflict-related displacement also surged — particularly in the Gaza Strip, where conflict has raged since October 2023. About 2 million Palestinians were forced from their homes, according to the Global Report on Internal Displacement.

The Americas likewise showed a dramatic increase, with 14.5 million people forced to flee within their national boundaries. The US alone accounted for 11 million disaster-related movements — nearly a quarter of the global total for such events.

In South Asia, disaster displacement nearly tripled, to 9.2 million, the region’s second-highest figure in more than a decade.

Conflict was the primary driver of internal displacement in 2024. In Sudan, the situation has deteriorated dramatically since fighting erupted there in April 2023.

“It has become the largest and most devastating displacement, humanitarian and protection crisis in the world today,” Tarik Argaz, a UNHCR representative, told Arab News.

As of mid-2024, more than 12.4 million people had been displaced in Sudan — including 8.1 million internally and more than 4 million who had fled to neighboring countries. These figures are based on UNHCR’s operational data collected during the continuing crisis.

By April 2025, the scale of displacement had grown further. According to UNHCR’s Global Trends Report, Sudan now represents the largest forced displacement crisis in the world, with a combined total of 14.3 million displaced people — including refugees and internally displaced people.




People who fled the Zamzam camp for the internally displaced after it fell under RSF control, rest in a makeshift encampment in an open field near the town of Tawila in war-torn Sudan's western Darfur region on April 13, 2025. (AFP)

“Security remains the major challenge in many regions of Sudan,” Argaz said. “Access to different areas continues to change due to the dynamic nature of the conflict.”

Disasters also triggered a record 45.8 million new internal displacements — the highest since 2008. An overwhelming 99.5 percent of these were caused by climate-related events, particularly storms and floods.

Argaz said climate change and displacement are becoming increasingly interconnected.

“Adverse effects of climate change and disasters have contributed to increased forced displacement over past decades,” he said.

“As extreme weather events and environmental conditions worsen with global heating, they are contributing to multiple and overlapping crises, increasing poverty and loss of livelihoods.

“The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre estimates that over 25 million people are forced to move due to disaster-related causes each year.

“The majority of people forcibly displaced by persecution, conflict and violence today live in countries that are highly vulnerable and ill-prepared to adapt to climate change.”

INNUMBERS

• 83.4 million By the end of 2024, more than 83.4 million people in the world were internally displaced — the highest number yet recorded.

• 9.2 million In South Asia, disaster displacement nearly tripled, to 9.2 million, the region’s second-highest figure in more than a decade.

Despite ongoing challenges, UNHCR continues to provide lifesaving support — including shelter, healthcare, psychosocial services, and cash assistance — while also working with regional partners to coordinate a broader response to displacement.

In a rare sign of progress, 9.8 million forcibly displaced people returned home in 2024, including 1.6 million refugees — the most in more than two decades — and 8.2 million internally displaced persons — the second highest yet recorded.

However, many of these returns occurred under difficult political and security conditions.

A large number of Afghans, for example, were forced to return to Afghanistan in 2024, often arriving in dire circumstances. In countries such as Democratic Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, and South Sudan, new displacements unfolded even as others returned.

“Even amid the devastating cuts, we have seen some rays of hope over the last six months,” said UN High Commissioner Grandi, referring to the recent reduction in aid funding by the US and other major Western donors.

“Nearly 2 million Syrians have been able to return home after over a decade uprooted. The country remains fragile and people need our help to rebuild their lives again.”




Congolese refugees displaced by ongoing clashes in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo carry their belongings as they disembark from a truck upon arrival at the Gihanga refugee transit camp in Gihanga on February 17, 2025.

Internally displaced persons should be afforded the same rights and freedoms as all other citizens and habitual residents of their country, Argaz said.

“Our advocacy efforts have been instrumental in supporting the protection of internally displaced persons on various fronts — from access to documentation, education, healthcare, and livelihoods, to promoting economic inclusion and the peaceful resolution of conflicts, which are often the root cause of displacement,” he said.

Internally displaced persons often face a range of protection challenges that vary depending on the context.

These typically include limited access to basic necessities such as shelter, food, water, and healthcare — particularly during emergencies and in protracted displacement situations.

Many are also vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, including gender-based violence.

Long-term solutions such as return or local integration are still out of reach for millions.

“The cost of inaction is rising,” Bilak said. “And displaced people are paying the price.”


UK lawyer who represented Hamas says he was unlawfully detained

UK lawyer who represented Hamas says he was unlawfully detained
Updated 6 sec ago

UK lawyer who represented Hamas says he was unlawfully detained

UK lawyer who represented Hamas says he was unlawfully detained
  • Fahad Ansari says police targeted him because of his client
  • He has launched legal proceedings against home secretary, chief constable of north Wales police

LONDON: A British lawyer who issued Hamas’ legal challenge against its ban in the UK said he was unlawfully detained under the Terrorism Act last month, The Guardian reported on Wednesday.

Fahad Ansari said his phone, which contained legally privileged information, was examined by police because he was known to have Hamas as a client.

On Wednesday, he launched legal proceedings against Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and the chief constable of north Wales police over the incident.

Ansari said on Aug. 6, while returning from a family holiday in Ireland, he was stopped by officers at Holyhead port in Wales.

He is challenging his treatment, including detaining and questioning, the seizure of his work phone and the copying of its data for examination.

Jude Bunting KC of Doughty Street Chambers prepared Ansari’s legal challenge against his detention.

The submission said the use of powers under schedule seven of the Terrorism Act — which allows officers to stop, question, search and detain a person at a port or border — “cannot be justified against a lawyer by reference to the fact that he has acted for a client of interest to the police or intelligence services in the past, or to obtain information about that client from the lawyer.”

Ansari said during his detention, he was mostly questioned about the banned group Palestine Action.

He was also asked about Hamas, but refused to divulge information due to client confidentiality.

Ansari works in a consultant role at Duncan Lewis solicitors, but was previously director and principal solicitor at Riverway Law which, in a pro bono capacity because of the threat of sanctions, represented Hamas in a challenge to the group’s proscription in the UK.

“In the decade that I have been involved in national security cases, I have never heard of lawyers in England being targeted to this extent because of their clients,” Ansari said.

“I have dealt with the usual media harassment for taking on clients who some consider to be controversial, including Hamas who my law firm represented in its application to be removed from the government’s list of banned groups.

“Some have complained that representing Hamas brings the profession into disrepute. Yet, what really undermines the integrity of the profession is when unpopular clients are unable to secure legal representation because of fear of public opprobrium and state intimidation.”

Because of his role in representing Hamas, Ansari was reported to the Solicitors Regulation Authority by the Campaign Against Antisemitism and Robert Jenrick, shadow home secretary at the time.

In his legal challenge over the detention, Ansari is seeking an urgent injunction that would prevent police from sharing the contents of his work phone, which are “overwhelmingly covered by legal privilege.”

He said police detained him for three hours, took his fingerprints and photograph, and swabbed him for DNA.

He was also ordered to remove the face ID and PIN code from his phone under threat of arrest.

If the legal challenge succeeds, Ansari said he will seek damages over trespass to property and person, as well as false imprisonment.

He added that an officer who questioned him over Palestine Action said: “Many people, including my wife, think the ban is ludicrous.” 


Irish president suggests UN should exclude Israel for ‘practicing genocide’ in Gaza

Irish president suggests UN should exclude Israel for ‘practicing genocide’ in Gaza
Updated 17 September 2025

Irish president suggests UN should exclude Israel for ‘practicing genocide’ in Gaza

Irish president suggests UN should exclude Israel for ‘practicing genocide’ in Gaza
  • Michael D. Higgins called the UN findings that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza a ‘very important document’
  • ‘We must look at their exclusion from the United Nations itself,’ he suggested, referring to Israel and countries that supply it with arms

LONDON: Irish President Michael D. Higgins has suggested the exclusion of Israel and countries that supply it with arms from the UN, following a recent UN report that concluded Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

Higgins, whose term ends later this year, called the findings of the team of independent experts commissioned by the UN Human Rights Council a “very important document.”

He said: “I believe myself that the kind of actions that are necessary now are the exclusion of those who are practicing genocide, and those who are supporting genocide with armaments.

“We must look at their exclusion from the United Nations itself, and we should have no hesitation any longer in relation to ending trade with people who are inflicting this at our fellow human beings.”

The findings from the three-member team were published this week as the Israeli government deployed tanks and ground troops to occupy Gaza City after weeks of targeting high-rise buildings in the Palestinian metropolis, where nearly 1 million people reside.

The Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel, established four years ago, cannot take action against individual countries. However, its findings may be used by prosecutors at the International Criminal Court or the UN’s International Court of Justice.

Israel has refused to cooperate with the UN commission and has repeatedly described allegations of genocide as “antisemitic.”


Spain arrests 19 for alleged migrant killings on Atlantic trip

Spain arrests 19 for alleged migrant killings on Atlantic trip
Updated 58 min 5 sec ago

Spain arrests 19 for alleged migrant killings on Atlantic trip

Spain arrests 19 for alleged migrant killings on Atlantic trip
  • Many of the missing are presumed to have been thrown overboard during the 11-day voyage
  • Survivors told investigators that several fellow passengers began “attacking dozens of people, beating and mistreating them in various ways“

MADRID: Spanish police said Wednesday that they had arrested 19 people accused of murder and torture aboard a migrant boat heading from Senegal to the Canary Islands, where at least 50 people went missing.
The wooden vessel was rescued adrift south of Gran Canaria in the Atlantic on August 24 with 248 survivors on board, the Spanish National Police said.
Authorities believe the boat originally carried around 300 people, and many of the missing are presumed to have been thrown overboard during the 11-day voyage.
Survivors told investigators that several fellow passengers began “attacking dozens of people, beating and mistreating them in various ways,” police said in a statement.
“In some cases, they threw migrants into the sea alive and refused to rescue those who fell in by accident,” it added.
Some of the killings are thought to be linked to superstitions, with victims accused of being “witches” responsible for engine breakdowns, food shortages or storms. Others were allegedly killed for protesting the harsh conditions.
One male passenger, seriously ill when rescued, later died in hospital.
All 19 suspects are in pretrial detention facing charges of facilitating irregular immigration, homicide, assault and torture.
Spain is one of the three main entry points for irregular migrants to Europe, alongside Italy and Greece.
Authorities say thousands have died in recent years attempting the Atlantic crossing, mainly to the Canary Islands.
Strong ocean currents and poorly maintained vessels make the long journey off Africa’s west coast especially dangerous.
Almost 47,000 migrants reached the archipelago last year, setting a record for the second consecutive year, as stricter Mediterranean controls pushed migrants to attempt the Atlantic route.
Numbers are down so far this year, falling 53 percent between January 1 and September 15 compared with the same period in 2024, according to the latest interior ministry figures.


Israel’s refusal to allow British MPs West Bank access ‘shameful,’ says UK minister

Israel’s refusal to allow British MPs West Bank access ‘shameful,’ says UK minister
Updated 17 September 2025

Israel’s refusal to allow British MPs West Bank access ‘shameful,’ says UK minister

Israel’s refusal to allow British MPs West Bank access ‘shameful,’ says UK minister
  • Health Secretary Wes Streeting says Israel’s treatment of Simon Opher and Peter Prinsley ‘no longer surprising’
  • The politicians, who are both doctors, were refused entry while traveling with a delegation to the occupied West Bank

LONDON: A senior UK government minister has criticized the “shameful” treatment of two British MPs after they were blocked from entering the occupied West Bank.

Simon Opher and Peter Prinsley, who are both doctors, were part of a delegation traveling to the territory to witness medical and humanitarian work. They were stopped by Israeli authorities on Monday as they tried to enter from Jordan.

“I find the treatment of two highly respected clinicians and members of parliament by the Israeli government shameful, but no longer surprising,” said Health Secretary Wes Streeting.

His comments come as the UK government faces increased pressure to take tougher action against Israel.

Opher, who along with Prinsley is a member of the ruling Labour Party, has called for the government to recognize a Palestinian state and sanction senior Israeli officials.

Israel’s decision to block the pair from entering the country was also condemned by UK Minister for the Middle East and North Africa Hamish Falconer as “unacceptable.”

“I have been clear with the Israeli authorities that this is no way to treat British parliamentarians,” he said.

Alistair Carmichael, chair of the Council for Arab-British Understanding which organized the delegation, said the Israeli action was “deeply troubling.” 

“It is yet a further example of behavior that one should not expect from a country the (UK) government sees as an ally,” he said.

CAABU said the official reason given by Israel for blocking the two MPs was “public security or public safety or public order considerations.”

The MPs were due to meet UK diplomats in Jerusalem and Palestinian and Israeli human rights organizations, including Medical Aid for Palestinians

Opher said he had become especially concerned about how the Gaza conflict has affected healthcare in both Gaza and the West Bank.

“I obviously wanted to see the situation for myself, better understand the issues and see what, if anything, could be done to help,” he said.

He accused Israel of fighting a “financial war” on the West Bank by withholding payments to the Palestinian Authority. He also said he feared that, as in Gaza, Israel would target healthcare workers.

Since the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel in 2023, the Israeli military has launched widespread operations in the West Bank, killing hundreds of Palestinians.

The blocking of the MPs is the second time this year Israel has stopped members of a British parliamentary delegation from visiting the territory, with Labour MPs Yuan Yang and Abtisam Mohamed denied entry in April.


Europe struggles with chronic drug shortages, auditors warn

Europe struggles with chronic drug shortages, auditors warn
Updated 17 September 2025

Europe struggles with chronic drug shortages, auditors warn

Europe struggles with chronic drug shortages, auditors warn
  • The European Commission identified fragile supply chains and heavy reliance on Asian manufacturers
  • The ECA warned that stockpiling in some countries could worsen medical shortages elsewhere in the bloc

BRUSSELS: Europeans remain at risk of running short of medicines, including common antibiotics and other vital treatments, a European Court of Auditors report showed Wednesday.
The European Commission identified fragile supply chains and heavy reliance on Asian manufacturers, especially for essential drugs such as antibiotics and painkillers, as key causes, the ECA said.
In July, European crisis chief Hadja Lahbib said the EU aims to stockpile critical medical equipment and vaccines in case of future health crises and to create a network to improve coordination among member states.
But the ECA warned that stockpiling in some countries could worsen medical shortages elsewhere in the bloc.
Shortages peaked in 2023 and 2024, with EU countries running critically short of 136 medicines between January 2022 and October 2024, the report said.
ECA said the shortages are a “chronic headache for the EU,” with the bloc still lacking a “well-oiled system” for addressing severe medicine shortages.
Auditors found the system to prevent drug shortages lacked a solid legal framework and timely information, with the European Medicines Agency, the region’s drug regulator, having limited powers outside health crises.
“Medicine shortages can have severe consequences for patients, compromise public health and come at a high cost for doctors, pharmacies and countries alike,” said Klaus Heiner Lehne, the ECA member leading the audit.
Regulatory barriers in the EU’s medicine market hinder cross-border redistribution, worsening drug shortages and unequal access, the report said.
The Commission has proposed legal changes that aim to cut reliance on countries such as China and India and, once passed, could significantly improve the system, the report added.