The
Geneva-based Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) said
that figure represented a 20% increase since 2021, with an
unprecedented number of people fleeing in search of safety and
shelter.
IDMC said that nearly three-quarters of the world's displaced
people live in 10 countries, including Syria, Afghanistan,
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Ukraine and Sudan, due
to conflicts that prompted significant displacement in 2022.
The war in Ukraine triggered nearly 17 million displacements
last year, according to IDMC.
"Conflict and violence triggered 28.3 million internal
displacements worldwide, a figure three times higher than the
annual average over the past decade," it said.
The bulk of displaced people last year - 32.6 million - was due
to disasters including floods, droughts and landslides.
"Conflict and disasters combined last year to aggravate people's
pre-existing vulnerabilities and inequalities, triggering
displacement on a scale never seen before," said Jan Egeland,
secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, which set up
IDMC in 1998.
"The war in Ukraine also fuelled a global food security crisis
that hit the internally displaced hardest. This perfect storm
has undermined years of progress made in reducing global hunger
and malnutrition."
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Angus
MacSwan)
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