Sweden backs down on 13-year-old criminal age proposal, proposes 14 instead
Sweden's centre-right government has abandoned plans to lower the age of criminal responsibility to 13, instead proposing a revised threshold of 14, J...
The number of people displaced by conflict and persecution around the world fell in 2025 for the first time in more than a decade, according to a new report by the UN refugee agency.
The report offers a rare sign of progress after years of rising displacement. Yet the agency warned that millions of refugees remain unable to rebuild their lives and continue to face years, and often decades, away from home.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said 5.4 million people were newly displaced during 2025, bringing the total number of refugees and people in refugee-like situations worldwide to 41.6 million. The figure includes around 6 million Palestinian refugees.
At the same time, nearly 14.7 million refugees and internally displaced people returned home. That was a 50% increase on the previous year and the second-highest annual return figure recorded since 1965.
Most returns took place in six countries: the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine and Myanmar.
However, returning home did not always mean returning to safety.
UNHCR warned that many people went back to communities struggling with damaged infrastructure, limited access to healthcare and education, and ongoing insecurity.
The agency said these conditions raise concerns about whether returns can be sustained over the long term.
Afghanistan recorded the largest number of returns in 2025. Around 2.9 million Afghans went back, including 1.9 million refugees.
The figure was five times higher than the previous year and was largely driven by tougher policies in neighbouring Iran and Pakistan. Many Afghans reported feeling they had little choice but to leave.
As a result, the global Afghan refugee population fell sharply from 5.8 million in 2024 to 3.7 million in 2025.
Syria also saw significant returns following the fall of former president Bashar al-Assad's government in December 2024.
Around 1.3 million Syrians returned home during 2025, almost three times the number recorded the previous year. The global Syrian refugee population declined from 6 million to 4.9 million by the end of the year.
But UNHCR cautioned that conditions remain difficult.
“However, many returnees face serious challenges, including insecurity, widespread destruction, weak economic conditions, limited services and jobs, and continued sporadic violence in parts of the country,” the report said.
While displacement fell overall in 2025, new crises are already influencing global trends this year.
According to UNHCR, around 3.2 million people have been temporarily displaced in Iran since joint U.S.-Israeli strikes at the end of February.
In Lebanon, about one million people have been forced from their homes since the outbreak of war on 2 March, amid Israeli strikes and evacuation orders.
The agency said the developments show how quickly new conflicts can reverse progress made elsewhere.
Despite the decline in refugee numbers, UNHCR stressed that long-term displacement remains one of the world's biggest humanitarian challenges.
Around 70% of refugees have been living in exile for five years or more, often in countries such as Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iran.
The agency has set a goal of halving the number of refugees and others living in protracted displacement by 2035. It plans to do this by expanding access to education, employment and economic opportunities, particularly in lower and middle-income countries that host most of the world's refugees.
“Asylum and protection are life-saving and not up for debate, but we cannot accept a future in which millions of refugees remain trapped for years or decades without realistic prospects of rebuilding their lives,” said UNHCR High Commissioner Barham Salih.
The agency said supporting voluntary returns, while also helping refugees become more self-reliant in host countries, will be essential to achieving that goal.
Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry says 19 citizens have been repatriated following a deadly drone attack on two cargo ships in the Sea of Azov on 5 June.
A Sudanese man has been arrested over a knife attack in Belfast that left a man seriously injured and prompted calls online for a protest after footage of the incident circulated widely on social media.
Iran and Israel said on Monday (8 June) they had halted attacks on each other following an appeal from U.S. President Donald Trump, as Axios reported that Trump had privately told Benjamin Netanyahu “be careful, or you will be on your own very soon”.
Mexico and South Africa meet in Thursday’s World Cup opener in Mexico City, with both teams approaching the match from very different positions but facing their own pressures.
Ukraine's military said it struck a Russian "shadow fleet" tanker in the Black Sea as part of ongoing efforts to disrupt Moscow's energy and logistics networks. The move underscores Kyiv's focus on targeting maritime assets it says are used to bypass sanctions on Russian oil exports.
Sweden's centre-right government has abandoned plans to lower the age of criminal responsibility to 13, instead proposing a revised threshold of 14, Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer confirmed on Thursday (11 June).
Three Indian sailors have been killed after a U.S. military strike on a commercial tanker in the Gulf of Oman, India's shipping minister has confirmed. The incident has sparked diplomatic tensions between New Delhi and Washington.
Mexico and South Africa meet in Thursday’s World Cup opener in Mexico City, with both teams approaching the match from very different positions but facing their own pressures.
Start your day informed with the AnewZ Morning Brief. Here are the top stories for 11 June, covering the latest developments you need to know.
The Ebola outbreak in DRC has spread to a new health zone in the northeastern province of Ituri, health authorities said on Wednesday (10 June), highlighting the challenges of containing the virus more than three weeks after the epidemic was declared.
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