Africa home to nearly half of global displaced population, IDMC report says

Africa home to nearly half of global displaced population, IDMC report says
Civilians who fled the war in Sudan camp at the UNHCR transit centre in Renk
Civilians who fled the war in Sudan camp at the UNHCR transit centre in Renk

GENEVA, May 26 (NNN-AGENCIES) — A record 75.9 million people are living in internal displacement due to conflict, and nearly half that number is in Sub-Saharan Africa, according to a recent report.

The report from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) shows 34.8 million people in the region were displaced in 2023, up from the previous year. The biggest increase came in Sudan, which is currently in the midst of a civil war.

Fighting between the Sudanese armed forces and the RSF has displaced 9.1 million since April 2023, making Sudan the country with the most displaced people globally.

According to the IDMC, the number marks “the most ever recorded in a single country since records began in 2008.”

The conflict has made it difficult for aid agencies to reach the millions in need, triggering more displacement as people search for food, water, medicine, and safety.

Elsewhere, fighting in the Democratic Republic of Congo between the army and rebels has displaced close to 7 million people. Conflict in Ethiopia that began with a two-year war in Tigray in 2020, and erupted in many parts of the country, displaced 790,000 people last year.

Africa’s conflicts are usually over territory, community politics, and control over resources, with at least 10 African countries, predominantly in West Africa, dealing with terrorism-related conflicts.

Burkina Faso is the most affected of the West African countries, with 700,000 people displaced last year, up 61 percent from 2022.

“A rising conflict is really contributing to the rising trend, and especially weather-related disasters, including floods, storms, and drought, are also contributing to pushing the figures to an all-time high,” said Vicente Anzellini, coordinator and lead author of the IDMC report.

“So, all of this is really a concerning trend. It’s important to underscore, however, that governments and humanitarian actors are taking more action and are producing more data. And this, of course, influences the trend.”

Anzellini said governments need to improve their capabilities to resolve conflicts and cope with natural disasters.

“What we’re really seeing in the region should be a reason for concern and more efforts need to be put in conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and disaster risk reduction across this region to reduce the trend that, again, highly influences the global trend,” Anzellini said.

“So, if internal displacement is addressed and reduced in Africa, the global trend will also successfully reduce. And it’s unfortunately not a trend that we’re seeing in the last couple of years. And for this to happen more government leadership and investments will be needed.”

The Swiss-based agency says the overwhelming majority of the displaced stay in their own countries as they struggle to survive and rebuild their lives.

The IDMC says no country is immune to disaster displacement and that conflicts in Sudan, the DRC, and the Palestinian territories drove up the number around the world. — NNN-AGENCIES

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