Long conflicts and new ones like those of Sudan and Looptogether with natural disasters, forced tens of millions of people to leave their homes in 2023 and once again broke the record for internally displaced people in the world, up to 75.9 million, according to a report published this Tuesday.
The annual study published by the NGOs Internal Displacement Observatory (IDMC) and the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) showed a year-on-year increase in 6.7% in the displaced population worldwide, reaching the highest figure since this report began to be prepared in 2008.
Sudan, the country with the largest displaced population
Internally displaced persons due to conflicts stood at 68.3 million at the end of 2023, a 9% more than in 2023, with Sudan being the country with the largest population in this situation (9.1 million, the highest number in a single country since the beginning of these studies in 2008), due to the civil war that began in April of that year.
Next were Syria (7.2 million), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (6.7 million), Colombia (5.1 million) and Yemen (4.5 million), all of them victims of long internal conflicts.
In Palestine, the conflict that began on October 7 of last year had left a total of 1.7 million displaced by the end of 2023, more than three quarters of the population of the strip, according to IDMC and NRC.
Regarding long-term internally displaced persons due to natural disasters (7.7 million), at the end of 2023 there were 1.5 million in Afghanistan, 1.2 million in Pakistan, 881,000 in Ethiopia, 882,000 in Turkey and 639,000 in China. .
Almost 47 million forced displacements in a single year
Last year there were, on the other hand, 46.9 million displacements, of which 20.5 million were due to conflicts and 26.4 million to natural disasters, indicators that are different from those of displaced people, since the same person He may have left home several times or already returned home.
Last year, some of these large flows of moving populations occurred in Sudan (more than 6 million displaced by the conflict), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (3.7 million) or Palestine (3.4 million concentrated in the last three months of the year), which alone concentrated two thirds of the new movements throughout the year.
The worst exoduses of 2023 due to natural disasters occurred in Turkey and Syria due to the February earthquake (4 million displacements in the first country and 700,000 in the second) and in China due to summer floods, with more than 4.7 million movements.
A 41% of the new displacements were recorded in Sub-Saharan Africa (19.5 million), and a 22% in East Asia and the Pacific (10.5 million), but the report warns that developed countries are also increasingly affected by these trends, as was shown last year in Canada and Greece, the nations in the world with the most movements due to of the fires.
IDMC and NRC highlighted in their report that the number of internally displaced people in the world has increased by more than one fifty% in the last five years, until reaching “alarming levels of people forced to flee their homes due to conflict and violence,” in the words of the director of the first of these NGOs, Alexandra Bilak.
The new annual record of displaced people “indicates that there has been a failure in conflict prevention and pacification efforts”added Jan Egeland, secretary general of NRC and former humanitarian coordinator of the United Nations.
It may interest you
- Misery deepens in Rafah as Israel intensifies offensive
- Sudan’s silent suffering after a year of “forgotten war”
- The latest obstacles to bringing humanitarian aid to Gaza, where hunger worsens
Source: Gestion

Ricardo is a renowned author and journalist, known for his exceptional writing on top-news stories. He currently works as a writer at the 247 News Agency, where he is known for his ability to deliver breaking news and insightful analysis on the most pressing issues of the day.