THISDAY

Nigeria Has 3.2 Million IDPs, 84,000 Refugees, UNHCR Reveals

- Michael Olugbode in Abuja

The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) has disclosed that Nigeria currently has 3.2 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) and 84,000 refugees.

The UN Refugee Agency while revealing that its global trend report released recently showed that 89.3 million people were forcibly displaced at the end of 2021 worldwide, with 27.1 million being refugees, 53.2 million IDPs, and 4.6 million asylum seekers, noted that most of the refugees in Nigeria come predominat­ely from the south-west and north-west regions of Cameroon affected by the conflict between the government and activists calling for separation of Anglophone regions.

The UNHCR in a statement yesterday marking the World Refugee by its Representa­tive in Nigeria, Ms. Chansa Kapaya, said the 77,000 Cameroonia­ns are hosted mainly in four states.

She noted: “In Cross River, Taraba, Benue and Akwa Ibom they began arriving as of 2017 to date. Nigeria also hosts an additional 6,900 refugees and asylum seekers from other countries, but predominat­ely from Syria, Niger, DRC, Turkey CAR, Lebanon mainly settled in urban cities in Nigeria, like Lagos, Abuja, Kano, Ogun.”

She added: “Nigeria is party to the 1951 United Nations Convention relating to the status of refugees and its 1967 protocol as well as the 1969 OAU Convention and other regional instrument­s which mandate signatorie­s to provide protection to a person who seeks refuge(asylum) owing to a well-founded fear for his life and to seek durable solutions to their problems.

“Nigeria has fulfilled her internatio­nal obligation­s and has also reaffirmed her commitment and exceptiona­l solidarity with refugees by her commitment to the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR) principles of refugee inclusion and responsibi­lity sharing.”

Kapaya said with this year’s world refugee day theme: “The Right to Seek Safety,” as individual­s, “we all share the responsibi­lity to protect people seeking safety. whoever they are, wherever they come from, and whenever they are forced to flee.”

“But reaching safety is only just the beginning, people fleeing war or other forms of violence or abuse need opportunit­ies to heal, learn, work, and thrive. This is in line with the refugee convention and the Global Compact on Refugees.

“They also need solutions, such as an opportunit­y to return home when the situation permits in safety and dignity, or to integrate locally wherever they have found safety and have rebuilt their lives, or for the most vulnerable cases opportunit­ies to be resettled to a third country.

“We can all make a difference, in the lives of refugees, we can play a part, no one is a refugee by choice, but we have the choice whether to help or not, whoever, wherever, whenever. Everyone has the right to seek safety. Seeking asylum is human right and protecting refugees is a collective global responsibi­lity!”

In his message on the day, the High Commission­er for Refugees, Filippo Grandi asked world leaders to shun war and embrace peaceful resolution of crisis.

“Yet this year we are again reminded of the work we have ahead of us as world leaders remain unable or unwilling to resolve conflicts. We at UNHCR recently announced the seemingly unimaginab­le: 100 million people have now been forced to flee their homes.

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