Country of origin | Source | Data date | Population | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dem. Rep. of the Congo | UNHCR, Government | 31 May 2019 | 38.4% | 9,531 |
Burundi | UNHCR, Government | 31 May 2019 | 31.6% | 7,841 |
Somalia | UNHCR, Government | 31 May 2019 | 15.3% | 3,794 |
Rwanda | UNHCR, Government | 31 May 2019 | 13.9% | 3,451 |
Others | UNHCR, Government | 31 May 2019 | 0.8% | 194 |
UNHCR, 22 Mar 2019
UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is working with governments and humanitarian partners in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi to provide relief to the survivors of the Tropical Cyclone Idai, which struck the east coast of southern Africa on 14 and 15 March. Read more
unhcr, 15 Apr 2016
In southern Malawi, a major UNHCR-run relocation operation involving some 10,000 Mozambican asylum-seekers and aimed at improving the conditions in which they are living began earlier this morning. A first group of 81 asylum-seekers left Nsanje district on two buses to make the 320-km journey to ... Read more
UNHCR, 15 Mar 2016
UNHCR welcomes a decision by the Malawian government to reopen a former refugee camp to help cope with the rising numbers of people fleeing Mozambique. Close to 10,000 refugees have now been registered in southern Malawi. Most of the new arrivals, who have been crossing to Malawi since mid-December... Read more
Date of Funding Data | 30 April 2019 (4 months ago) |
Following the 2015 election dispute in Mozambique, new influx of asylum seekers and Zimbabwean nationals flee Mozambique to neighbouring countries to seek protection
The on-going conflicts in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have caused and continue to cause internal and external displacement of populations. In 2017, some 100,000 Congolese fled to neighbouring countries as refugees, due to widespread militia activities, unrest and violence, joining the 585,000 already in exile. The security conditions in DRC, especially in the eastern and central parts have continued to worsen since the beginning of 2018. Because of this, the Congolese refugee population is now among the ten largest in the world. Nearly 55 per cent are children, many crossing borders unaccompanied or separated. Existing camps and sites in many asylum countries are saturated, and available basic services are stretched to the limit. The situation requires support, adequate resources and collaboration so that effective protection and assistance can be delivered efficiently to Congolese refugees.