UN to evaluate refugee strategy

Refugees from eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo at a food distribution point at Nyarushishi Transit Camp in Rusizi district, Rwanda. (AFP)
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Updated 13 December 2025
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UN to evaluate refugee strategy

  • The number of people forcibly displaced worldwide has almost doubled in the last decade to 117.3 million but funding for international aid has slumped

GENEVA: The United Nations will appraise its policies on refugees next week, due to an increase in armed conflict, the politicization of asylum law and cuts to international aid.
Governments, civil society, the private sector and academics will jointly assess progress over the last few years and put forward new solutions at a Global Refugee Forum Review meeting from Monday to Wednesday.
Donor commitments are also expected, with the UN refugee agency facing a massive crisis.
The number of people forcibly displaced worldwide has almost doubled in the last decade to 117.3 million but funding for international aid has slumped, not least after the return of Donald Trump to the White House.
The United States previously provided more than 40 percent of the UNHCR budget but cuts by Washington since January, combined with belt-tightening from other major donor countries, have forced the organization to shed nearly 5,000 jobs — more than a quarter of its workforce.
“Now is not the moment to step back — it is the moment to reinforce partnerships and send a clear message to refugees and host countries: you are not alone,” said UNHCR’s chief of the global compact on refugees section, Nicolas Brass.
The number of people forced to flee persecution, conflict, violence, human rights violations and serious unrest increased in 2024 to a record 123.2 million refugees, internally displaced and asylum-seekers.
At the end of last year, just over a third were from Sudan (14.3 million), Syria (13.5 million), Afghanistan (10.3 million) or Ukraine (8.8 million).
“Across countries and communities, support for refugees continues,” said Brass, adding that two-thirds of the pledges made at the last Global Refugee Forum were “fulfilled or in progress.”

- ‘Serious risk’ -

According to the UNHCR, 10 countries have adopted new labor laws authorizing refugees to work since 2019, which has helped more than 500,000 people.
Ten countries have strengthened their asylum system, including Chad, which adopted its very first asylum law.
But in a recent report, UNHCR chief Filippo Grandi said the “sharp decline” in funding this year and that “available solutions fall far short of global needs.”
“Hard-won improvements are at serious risk,” he added. “Without renewed political will, sustained financing and coherent multilateral cooperation, these pressures threaten to erode the very systems we have worked tirelessly to build.”
Grandi is due to step down after 10 years at the helm and is expected to be succeeded by Iraq’s former president Barham Salih.
“The global context is deteriorating amid continued conflict, record civilian deaths... and deepening political divides, which are driving displacement and straining the system,” said Brass.
The UNHCR said burden-sharing remained unequal. Countries with only 27 percent of global wealth are hosting 80 percent of the world’s refugees.
The agency recently highlighted that three-quarters of displaced people live in countries at high or even extreme risk from climate change.
From Monday, discussions among the 1,800 delegates and 200 refugees will center around five themes: innovative financing; inclusion; safe pathways to third countries; transforming refugee camps into “humane settlements“; and long-term solutions.
Parallel events dedicated to major displacement situations will also be held, notably on Syria, Sudan and the Rohingya refugee crisis.


Neighbors of alleged Bondi gunmen shocked by deadly rampage

Updated 57 min 52 sec ago
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Neighbors of alleged Bondi gunmen shocked by deadly rampage

  • Local media named the two suspected gunmen as father and son Sajid and Naveed Akram

SYDNEY: Like many people in Sydney, Glenn Nelson spent his Sunday evening watching television coverage of a deadly shooting on the city’s iconic Bondi Beach.
But stepping onto his front porch, flanked by neatly trimmed box hedges, he saw armed police cordoning off the street before raiding the house opposite — home of the two suspects who are alleged to have killed 15 people in Australia’s worst mass shooting in decades.
“I thought, ‘Okay, I’ll catch the rest in the morning,’ the next thing, the drama is out the front door,” he said in an interview on Monday, shortly after mowing his lawn.
Nelson and other neighbors said the family living across the street kept to themselves, but seemed like any other in the suburb of Bonnyrigg, a working-class, well-kept enclave with an ethnically diverse population around 36 km (22 miles) by road from Sydney’s central business district.
Local media named the two suspected gunmen as father and son Sajid and Naveed Akram.
Police have not named the suspects, but they said the older man, 50, was killed at the scene, taking the number of dead to 16, while his 24-year-old son was in a critical condition in hospital.
Police said the son was known to authorities and the father had a firearms license.
The Sydney Morning Herald spoke to a woman on Sunday evening who identified herself as the wife and mother of the suspects.
She said the two men had told her they were going on a fishing trip before heading to Bondi and opening fire on an event celebrating the Jewish festival of Hanukkah.
“I always see the man and the woman and the son,” said 66-year-old Lemanatua Fatu, who lives across the street.
“They are normal people.”
Until Sunday’s shooting, Bonnyrigg was an otherwise unremarkable neighborhood typical of Sydney’s sprawling Western suburbs.
It has significant Vietnamese and Chinese communities, along with many residents who were born in Iraq, Cambodia and Laos, according to government data.
The town center, a strip mall with a large adjoining car park, is flanked by a mosque, a Buddhist temple and several churches.
“It’s a quiet area, very quiet,” Fatu said. “And people mind their own business, doing their own thing — until now.”
Not much is currently known about the suspects’ backgrounds.
A Facebook post from an Arabic and Qur'an studies institute appearing to show one of the men was removed on Monday and no one answered the door at an address listed for it in the neighboring suburb of Heckenberg.
On Monday afternoon, as police took down their cordon, several people re-entered the house, covering their faces. They made no comment to the media and did not answer the door.