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UNHCR says fewer people displaced worldwide in 2025 but long-term refugee crisis persists

UNHCR said 14.7 million people returned home in 2025, but many faced unsafe conditions and resettlement fell to 81,800.

  • The UNHCR Global Trends Report showed global refugee numbers fell to 41.6 million in 2025, marking the first decline in a decade despite persistently high displacement levels worldwide.
  • Returns gathered pace as 14.7 million displaced people went back to their countries of origin in 2025, with sharp increases recorded in Afghanistan, Sudan, and Syria driving the overall decline.
  • Despite the numbers, UNHCR cautioned that many returned under pressure, facing widespread infrastructure damage, insecurity, and limited access to basic services in their home countries.
  • Aiming to halve protracted displacement by 2035, UNHCR High Commissioner Barham Salih announced a shift toward job creation and education opportunities in low- and middle-income countries.
  • Displacement in Iran and Lebanon has already shaped global trends as ongoing crises in the Middle East continue to drive new displacement patterns in 2026.
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The number of forcibly displaced people fell last year for the first time in a decade, the United Nations said. An estimated 118 million people, or one in 70 people worldwide, are forcibly displaced.

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The number of worldwide refugees has fallen slightly for the first time in ten years.

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Al-Monitor broke the news in Washington, United States on Wednesday, June 10, 2026.
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