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Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Pakistanis suffered most displacement in 2009
* UN report says Sudan still has highest number of total IDPs
* NGO seeks more engagement with non-state armed groups
OSLO: Pakistan suffered the highest number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in 2009 due to the Taliban insurgency and the security forces’ military, a United Nations study showed on Monday.
The number of IDPs worldwide reached 27.1 million individuals in 2009, the highest number since records began in the mid 1990s, said the report.
Out of a total population of 170 million, some 3 million Pakistanis were newly displaced in 2009, the most in the world and three times more than second-placed Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
“The military operations of governments and armed non-state actors caused most displacement, and many people were displaced more than once,” said the report, published by Norwegian Refugee Council, a non-governmental organisation.
“The massive scale of displacement witnessed in countries such as Pakistan is a sad reminder that civilians are the ones who pay the highest price of armed conflict,” it added.
In 2008, the biggest new internal displacement of people was in the Philippines, where 600,000 fled fighting between the government and Muslim rebels.
While refugees who cross a country’s external border gain rights under international law, IDPs who have been forced to move due to conflict or hunger have no such rights in many countries.
Last year also set a new high in the number of displaced persons returning home, at around 5 million.
“Most of the people who were newly displaced during the year were able to return after a few weeks or months of displacement,” it said of the Pakistani displacement.
“However, many come back to situations where their homes have been destroyed and are not able to re-establish their lives and livelihoods, or where basic services are not on offer.”
The country with the most IDPs continues to be Sudan, with 4.9 million or about one in eight of the population, said the report.
Then came Colombia (3.3 - 4.9 million), Iraq (2.76 million), DRC (1.9 million), Somalia (1.5 million) and Pakistan (1.2 million), the report said.
The region most affected by internal displacement is Africa, with 11.6 million displaced people in 21 countries, while South and South-East Asia showed the biggest relative increase, of 23 percent to 4.3 million during 2009.
The report said displaced women and children were at high risk of rape and sexual violence in a number of countries including Chad, Colombia, DRC, India, Iraq, Kenya, Myanmar, Somalia and Sudan.
“The impact of conflict on civilians is brutal,” it said. “The international humanitarian community need to engage much more actively and consistently with non-state armed groups in order to improve our access to populations in conflict zones.” reuters
Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk
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