UN: 800,000 forced to flee their countries in 2011

GENEVA – Crises in Libya, Sudan, Somalia and elsewhere prompted 800,000 people to flee their countries last year, the highest number in 11 years, the United Nations’ refugee agency has said.

This picture taken on June 15, 2012 shows refugees heading to a water collection point at a transit site where tens of thousands of people have gathered in South Sudan's Upper Nile state near the border with Sudan. Over 100,000 people from Blue Nile state have crossed into the South since war broke out in September between Khartoum and rebels formerly aligned to the now independent South.. This picture taken on June 15, 2012 shows refugees heading to a water collection point at a transit site where tens of thousands of people have gathered in South Sudan's Upper Nile state near the border with Sudan. Over 100,000 people from Blue Nile state have crossed into the South since war broke out in September between Khartoum and rebels formerly aligned to the now independent South. AFP/HANNAH MCNEISH

A report issued Monday by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said that the total number of newly displaced people worldwide in 2011, including people who fled their homes but not their countries, was 4.3 million. The number of new cross-border refugees was the highest since it hit 822,000 in 2000.

However, the total number who were either refugees, internally displaced or in the process of seeking asylum at the end of last year declined to 42.5 million from 43.7 million in 2010. The reason was that 3.2 million people who were uprooted but stayed inside their countries were able to return home, the highest rate in more than a decade, the agency said.

But it said the latest figures pointed to worrying trends, including a consistently high number of displaced people over several years now. The total has exceeded 42 million people for each of the past five years.

UNHCR also said that recent years’ figures suggested people who become refugees were likely to remain uprooted for a long time. Of the 10.4 million refugees covered by the agency’s mandate, 7.1 million have been in exile for at least five years, it said.

Afghanistan remains the world’s leading source of refugees, accounting for some 2.7 million, UNHCR said. It was followed by Iraq with 1.4 million, Somalia with 1.1 million, Sudan with 500,000 and Congo with 491,000.

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