43.3 Million Children Displaced

A staggering 110 million people are forcibly displaced worldwide due to war, persecution, and violence, surpassing the population of Germany. Children bear a disproportionate burden, accounting for 40% of the total, with 43.3 million young lives disrupted by the global displacement crisis as of May 2023.

A record 43.3 million children lived in forced displacement by the end of 2022, according to latest UNICEF estimates. The UN Organisation also said that many of the children were displacedfor their entire childhood.

The number of children forcibly displaced from their homes doubled in the last decade. The war in Ukraine forced more than TWO million children to flee the country. Apart from this, one million children were displaced inside Ukraine.

“For more than a decade, the number of children forced to flee their homes has risen at an alarming rate, and our global capacity to respond remains under serious strain,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “The increase is in step with the consistent onslaught of conflict, crises and climate disasters around the world. But it also highlights many governments’ underwhelming response to ensure every refugee and internally displaced child can keep learning, stay healthy and develop to their full potential.”

FORCIBLY DISPLACED

Of the 43.3 million children who were forcibly displaced by the end of 2022, almost 60% (25.8 million) were internally displaced by conflict and violence. The number of refugee and asylum-seeking kids also hit a new record of 17.5 million, a number that does not even include those newly displaced in 2023, including by the conflict in Sudan. UNICEF estimates more than 9,40,000 kids have been displaced because of the conflict to date. In addition, extreme weather events, such as the Pakistan floods and the Horn of Africa drought, led to another 12.0 million displacements of kids over the course of 2022.

Internally displaced and refugee children are often amongst the most vulnerable. Many are denied access to education and health care, miss out on routine immunisation and cannot access social protection.

For many children, displacement is becoming increasingly protracted. Most of the displaced today will spend their entire childhoods in displacement. Climate induced displacement is expected to increase rapidly without urgent action to mitigate global warming and prepare communities living on the frontline of the climate crisis.

“Greater political will is required to address the drivers of displacement and provide long-term solutions for kid on the move,” said Russell. “A record number of refugee, migrant and displaced kids– a global population that rivals that of Algeria, Argentina or even Spain – demands a commensurate response. We have seen sustained change when governments properly invest in the inclusion of displaced kids and families. By working together, we can keep them safe, healthy, learning and protected.”

THE CALL

  • Recognising refugee, migrant and displaced children as they first and foremost – with rights to protection, inclusion, and participation
  • Providing safe and legal pathways for children to move, seek asylum and reunite with family
  • Ensuring no child is detained because of their migration status or returned without safeguards unless return has been determined to be in a child’s best interests
  • Strengthening national education, health, child protection and social protection systems to include displaced children without discrimination
  • Investing in national child protection systems to better protect children on the move at risk from exploitation and violence, particularly unaccompanied children
  • Listening to and meaningfully engaging displaced children in finding solutions that are sustainable and inclusive and that can help them realize their full potential

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