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Filippo Grandi visits Syria, seeks help for 13 million displaced people

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A Syrian mother and her daughter pictured on their return to Syria from Lebanon at the Jdeidet Yabous border crossing on 20 June 2025. © UNHCR/Andrew McConnell
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UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, says the international community must seize the political opportunity created by the collapse of the Assad regime to help rebuild Syria and ensure the 13 million people displaced during the war can return home.

Grandi spoke on Friday  20 June during a visit to the country to mark World Refugee Day.

Grandi met Syrian families re-entering the country after more than a decade as refugees in neighbouring Lebanon, who he said had “voted with their feet and decided to go back and restart their lives” following the fall of the previous government in December. The official Jdeidet Yabous border point is now “a welcoming place”, he said, but added that there were many challenges ahead for returning families.

At the border, trucks laden with people and possessions sounded their horns in celebration as they drove into Syria, and smiling children waved the country’s new three-starred flag as their parents formalized the paperwork for their return.

“It is very significant for me to spend World Refugee Day in a country where refugees can finally stop being refugees and can resume their place in their own communities, their own societies, in their own country,” Grandi said.

“It will be tough, and they will need a lot of help,” he continued. “Everything needs to be reconstructed in Syria. There is no electricity available to most people, the services are very, very fragile, and security continues to be a challenge in many places. Between … the new authorities of Syria and the international community, that’s the big challenge: bring Syria back to its feet and give a future to all these people that are making the decision to go back to their homes.”

More than 2 million Syrians have returned home since December, including nearly 600,000 refugees from neighbouring countries and just under 1.5 million who were displaced in other parts of the country.

More are expected to head home this summer following the end of the school year, but Grandi warned that without more international support to rebuild homes, schools and other vital infrastructure and services, the returns could prove short-lived.

“Then, even the people who have remained in Syria will opt to leave again, and that has to be avoided at all costs,” he said. “So on World Refugee Day, I really appeal to the international community to step up their support to this country and its people.”

Among those crossing the border on Friday was Iman, who was heading back to her home in Aleppo with her three children after 14 years living as a refugee in Lebanon. She described her plans to reestablish her once-thriving tailoring business, enrol her children in school, and rebuild her war-damaged home with the help of her husband, who has remained working in Lebanon for now.

“I am here to go to Aleppo and see how the situation is. If the situation is good … I can settle down again and live the life I used to live,” Iman said.

Asked what it was like to be back in Syria after such a long absence, she replied: “It’s an indescribable feeling of happiness. I cannot explain or describe it. Now we will go home and everything will go back to the way it was before, and even better, God willing.”


UNHCR is supporting returning Syrians with everything from transportation home and house repairs to legal aid for the replacement of lost identity and property documents. Much of its support to returnees and the local communities where they live is coordinated through a network of UNHCR-supported community centres.

But severe cuts to humanitarian aid have forced the agency to reduce its workforce and assistance programmes in Syria, with 17 out of 122 community centres nationwide already shuttered and a further 50 threatened with imminent closure.

Despite these challenges, UNHCR and its partners will continue to support the people of Syria, including those who have returned home and the millions who remain displaced within the country and across the region.

Grandi urged donors – from governments to individuals, companies and foundations – to continue to support this effort and so bring “one of the most long-standing refugee situations to a positive conclusion.”

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Over 82,000 migrants died, missing in 14 years

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In Djibouti, IOM teams collect essential data and support efforts to track shipwrecks and missing migrants along a dangerous migration route. Photo: IOM/Andi Pratiwi
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A new data released today by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) has revealed that about 8,000 migrants were reported dead or missing worldwide in 2025, bringing the total since 2014 to more than 82,000.

 At least around 340,000 family members are estimated to have been directly affected. Despite declines in arrivals in some regions, the data shows migration routes are shifting rather than easing, with risks remaining high along increasingly dangerous journeys.

The findings draw on IOM’s Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) Global Overview of Migration Routes and new analysis from the Missing Migrants Project (MMP). DTM tracks movements, changing routes and conditions along migration corridors through direct field monitoring and governmental data sources, while MMP documents migrant deaths and disappearances using official records, media reports and information from IOM missions worldwide. Together, the reports show how drivers at origin and policy changes along the routes are reshaping migration journeys, while the human cost of unsafe migration continues to rise.

“Routes are shifting in response to conflict, climate pressures and policy changes, but the risks are still very real,” said IOM Director General Amy Pope. “Behind these numbers are people taking dangerous journeys and families left waiting for news that may never come. Data is critical to understanding these routes and designing interventions that can reduce risks, save lives and promote safer migration pathways.”

The 2025 Global Overview of Migration Routes shows that lower arrival figures in some regions do not reflect reduced migration pressure, but rather changing journeys as enforcement measures, conflict dynamics and environmental stress have altered established pathways.

In the Americas, northbound movements along the Central American route fell sharply compared to 2024. In Europe, overall arrivals declined, but the profile of movements changed, with Bangladeshi nationals becoming the largest group arriving while Syrian arrivals fell following political and policy shifts.

In the Horn of Africa, movements towards the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia decreased slightly from 2024 but remained above 2023 levels, while flows from East Africa towards Southern Africa increased late in the year due to shifting labour demands in southern Ethiopia. Along the Western African Atlantic route, arrivals to the Canary Islands dropped significantly after strengthened border cooperation, but journeys have become longer, riskier and more geographically dispersed.

Across regions, DTM data shows persistent pressures along migration routes. Thousands of migrants were stranded in border areas with limited access to shelter, health care and protection, while returns and relocations increased, placing additional strain on local services and complicating reintegration.

Together, the findings show that changing routes do not mean reduced harm. As journeys become more fragmented and hazardous, deaths, disappearances and the suffering of families left behind remain a persistent reality.

The reports reflect IOM’s route-based approach, linking mobility tracking with analysis of risks and fatalities to better target interventions, prioritize resources and support governments along key migration corridors.

Ahead of the International Migration Review Forum in May, IOM is calling for renewed commitments to protect migrants, prevent deaths and disappearances, and better support families affected by migration tragedies. The Organization says the evidence is clear: fewer movements do not automatically mean safer journeys, and saving lives requires stronger international cooperation and sustained investment in evidence-based responses.

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Security operatives incepts human smugglers, rescue victims

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Security operatives in Libya have in different operations   incepted human smugglers and rescued the victims.

According to Migrant Rescue Watch Police during desert patrols on April 14, intercepted a vehicle carrying 23 undocumented #migrants including women & children of sub-Saharan nationalities. “All transferred to Al-Shatti Security Directorate pending DCIM notification.

On April  13, Migrant Rescue Watch said  Libyan Navy PB “Al-Marqab” rescued off the coast of Tobruk 32 #migrants of Bangladeshi, Egyptian & Sudanese nationalities. All disembarked in Tobruk Naval Base where they were provided with medical & humanitarian assistance by LRC.

It added that Libyan Coast Guard (Gen.Cmd.) rescued 130 nm NE of Tobruk 33 #migrants of Bangladeshi, Egyptian and Sudanese nationalities. All disembarked in Tobruk Naval Base.

About the same period it said the CID in Tobruk thwarted a major human smuggling operation and seized a truck transporting 150 undocumented #migrants of Bangladeshi and Pakistani nationalities.

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@ABoatReport condemns alleged Greek Coast Guard shooting at boat carrying 38 people

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Aegean Boat Report has condemned alleged shooting of 38 people including children by the Greek Coast Guard.

Late Friday night, @BoatReport said “Greek authorities say Coast Guard personnel fired gunshots to stop a high-powered speedboat carrying 38 people north of Rhodes. According to the official statement, warning shots were fired first, followed by what the Coast Guard calls “targeted gunfire” aimed at disabling the vessel.”

According to @BoatReport, this explanation raises serious questions.

It said firing at a small moving boat in the dark, from another moving vessel at sea, while 38 civilians — including many children — are onboard, is not a controlled or precise operation. It is extremely dangerous.

“Even a trained marksman would struggle to hit a specific target under such conditions. From a moving patrol vessel, in the dark, using a handgun or shotgun, the idea of accurately hitting a precise point on a fast-moving boat is highly questionable.

“Bullets can easily miss, ricochet off the hull, or strike people onboard. The boat was reportedly packed with passengers. So the central question remains: Why did they open fire at all?

@BoatReport added that “Greek authorities claim, as they routinely do in such incidents, that the vessel was “maneuvering dangerously and putting lives at risk.” But was it actually maneuvering dangerously — or simply trying to get away from the Coast Guard?

“Because once officers begin firing at a vessel carrying 38 people — 15 of them small children — the question of who is truly putting lives at risk becomes unavoidable.”

@BoatReport noted that if the intention was to arrest the smugglers, there were safer alternatives, adding  “boats transporting migrants often attempt to return to Turkey after dropping passengers. Allowing the passengers to disembark safely and intercepting the vessel on its return would avoid placing dozens of civilians directly in the line of fire.

“Instead, gunfire was used against a boat filled with men, women and children.This is not the first time such reckless actions have been reported. Outside Symi, a man was shot in the head during what authorities also described as “targeted shots.” More recently, off Chios, a Coast Guard vessel collided with a migrant boat during a high-speed chase, leaving 15 people dead.

In this case, no one was killed. But that does not make the decision any less dangerous.

One must also ask whether the onboard cameras on the Coast Guard vessel were operating during this incident. In previous cases, footage that could clarify what happened has often been unavailable, with cameras reportedly “not activated” or “not functioning.”

“Once again, the Greek Coast Guard appears willing to place the lives of civilians — including children — at extreme risk in the name of border enforcement.It is only a matter of time before such actions end in tragedy again.According to authorities, the 38 people onboard were eventually taken to land on Rhodes: 17 men, six women and 15 children. Two of the men, Turkish nationals aged 41 and 31, were arrested on suspicion of smuggling.”

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