Source: cnn.com 
 
  
More than 1 million people have been displaced by fighting in Iraq so far this year. 
 
 
This is the result of U.S. and Nato monopoly capitalist 1% fanning up flames of proxy wars all over the world -- severest sin on earth!!!                                                                                                        -- The New Legalist editor 
  
 
  
(CNN) -- More than 50 million people worldwide  currently are refugees, asylum seekers or internally displaced within  their own countries, the U.N. refugee agency said Friday, in a new  report released to mark World Refugee Day. 
  
That figure is more than  the entire population of Spain, South Africa or South Korea, or more  than double the population of Australia. 
  
The 51.2 million registered for 2013 is also 6 million more than the 45.2 million reported in 2012, according to the UNHCR’s annual Global Trends report -- a big jump in the wrong direction. 
  
The huge increase was  driven mainly by the war in Syria, which at the end of last year had  created 2.5 million refugees and displaced another 6.5 million people  within Syria, the report said. 
   
  
 The plight of Syria’s refugees  
  
Major internal  displacement was also seen last year in Africa, in the Central African  Republic and South Sudan, where conflicts have taken on an increasingly  ethnic nature. 
  
"We are seeing here the  immense costs of not ending wars, of failing to resolve or prevent  conflict," said U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres. 
  
While humanitarian  organizations can provide some relief, he said, "political solutions are  vitally needed. Without this, the alarming levels of conflict and the  mass suffering that is reflected in these figures will continue." 
  
The latest conflict in  Iraq, where Sunni extremist fighters are advancing southward toward  Baghdad, doesn’t figure in the report since it covers 2013. 
  
But more than 1 million  people have been displaced by fighting in Iraq so far this year -- half  of them in the past couple of weeks. That’s about one in 30 people  nationwide who have fled their homes. 
  
The soaring number of  refugees means more demand on the world’s wealthier donor countries to  provide aid and on those nations on the front lines to shelter and  absorb the refugees. 
  
Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq have all taken in large numbers of refugees from Syria since its 3-year-old civil war began. 
  
Speaking in Geneva,  Switzerland, on Friday, Guterres warned that if the current conflict in  Iraq worsens, prompting citizens to flee the country, the region will  come under even greater strain. 
  
"Looking at the region,  one asks ourselves, how can refugees from Iraq be received in the  context of all the other situations that exist around Iraq?" he said.  "So, I hope that this outflow will never come because the capacity of  the region to deal with it is practically nonexistent." 
  
According to the report,  the total number of refugees registered with the UNHCR and its sister  organization, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine,  in 2013 totaled 16.7 million. 
  
The largest populations  were from Afghanistan, Syria and Somalia -- together accounting for more  than half of the global refugee total, the UNHCR said. 
  
By region, Asia and the  Pacific had the largest refugee population overall at 3.5 million  people, the report said. Sub-Saharan Africa had 2.9 million, while the  Middle East and North Africa had 2.6 million. 
  
Another 1.1 million  people submitted applications for asylum last year, according to the  report, the majority of them in developed countries, with Germany a  favorite. Asylum seekers from Syria lodged the most applications, some  64,000, followed by the Democratic Republic of Congo and Myanmar. 
  
More than 25,000 asylum  applications were filed by children who were on their own or separated  from their parents, in what the UNHCR said was a record number. 
  
There were relatively few refugee returns in 2013, the report said, totaling fewer than 415,000. 
  
 
 
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