Cite as "AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 02111247 (posted Nov. 12, 2002)"
UNHCR News Release
8 November 2002
Developing countries host
most refugees, according to new statistical yearbook from
UNHCR
Developing countries produced 86 percent of the world’s
refugees over the past decade, but also provided asylum for seven out of ten of
those fleeing, according to a new statistical yearbook released today by the UN
refugee agency.
The first annual “UNHCR Statistical Yearbook” notes that
while rich countries voice increasing concern over the numbers of asylum seekers
arriving on their borders, it is mainly poor nations that provide asylum to the
world’s refugees – 72 percent over the past 10 years.
“The fact that
seven out of 10 refugees are hosted by low-income countries underscores the
responsibility of industrialized states to share in international refugee
protection,” is underscored within a compilation of the book’s main findings.
The new yearbook provides an overview of global forced displacement over
the past decade, including a wealth of specific information on trends in
industrialized countries and comprehensive data on refugee populations
worldwide.
In a foreword to the yearbook, High Commissioner Ruud Lubbers
notes that the data presented can help to highlight the impact on countries
hosting refugees, which is not always readily apparent.
“I hope the
Yearbook will prove to be a valuable tool for those researching the evolution of
global forced displacement, the nexus between asylum and migration, and the
sharing of burdens and responsibilities,” High Commissioner Lubbers writes.
“Above all, I hope it will provide a more solid underpinning for the current
refugee and asylum debate, and that it will contribute to informed policy and
decision-making.”
The number of refugees has hovered around 12 million
for the past five years (1997-2001) after dropping by nearly a quarter compared
to the previous five-year period (1992-1996). Although the total number of
refugees has remained relatively stable recently, their geographic distribution
has shifted. Asia has both produced and hosted a larger share of the world’s
refugees since the mid-1990s, while the number of refugees both originating from
and hosted by African countries has fallen.
In 2001, Afghans made up
one-third of the world refugee population and were also the major nationality of
origin of asylum seekers in industrialized countries. As the yearbook covers the
period through 31 December 2001, the significant changes in Afghanistan in 2002
are not included in the data. (In 2002, over 1.7 million Afghan refugees have
returned home and asylum applications from Afghans have dropped sharply. The
large-scale returns of Afghans in 2002 have also reversed an overall declining
trend in refugee repatriation, which, the yearbook notes, had fallen in recent
years to reach a 10-year low in 2001.)
The number of new refugee outflows
since the early 1990s has declined by 38 percent. However, the yearbook points
out that “although fewer refugees are crossing international borders, the plight
of internally displaced people may well have become worse”. The yearbook notes
that trends in internal displacement are difficult to assess due to a lack of
reliable information on the phenomenon. Some sources, however, estimate that
there are some 25 million conflict-induced internally displaced people
worldwide.
In 2001, asylum applications in industrialized countries rose
by eight percent. While the six non-European industrialized countries (Canada,
United States, Australia, New Zealand, Rep. of Korea, Japan) received 31 percent
more applications and Central Europe recorded a 33 percent increase, the 15
European Union member countries together saw a one percent decrease in
applications.
Overall, the yearbook notes, “since 1992, global refugee
figures have fallen, more refugees have repatriated than were forced to leave
their country and new refugee outflows have diminished.” However, the yearbook
goes on to stress that despite these trends, “there is no room for complacency.”
From the late 1990s through 2001, with refugee returns slowing down, fewer mass
outflows and a stabilizing refugee population, UNHCR increasingly had to manage
stable or protracted situations, some of them decades old.
The 165-page
yearbook was prepared by UNHCR’s Population and Geographic Data Section based on
statistics provided by governments and supplemented by information from UNHCR
registration systems and implementing partners. It will henceforth be produced
annually and will be available on the UNHCR website together with additional
statistical reports and information (http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/statistics/opendoc.pdf?tbl=STATISTICS&id=41206f7c0).
END
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