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70 years of protecting people forced to flee

70 years after we first formed, UNHCR is needed now more than ever.

14 December 2020

70 years of protecting people forced to flee

70 years after we first formed, UNHCR is needed now more than ever.

14 December 2020

Voluntary repatriation of Namibian refugees. Lubango Airport, southern Angola, 1989 © UNHCR/Lars Aström

UNHCR was created as the world sought to pick up the pieces after the Second World War. In 1954, it became the first UN agency to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize – but it was soon facing new refugee emergencies and its mission expanded. Today, 70 years since its creation, UNHCR is needed more than ever.

Trace UNHCR’s history of live-saving protection for people forced to flee their homes.

Join us in taking action to protect people forced to flee.

UNHCR in the 1950s

UNHCR’s history begins in 1950, when the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Statute of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees on December 14 of that year.

Resettlement of refugees through IRO Bremerhaven, Germany, 1951.
© UNHCR

UNHCR in the 1960s

In the 1960s, UNHCR’s role began to expand. Notably, the upheaval resulting from the end of the decolonization era gave rise to many displacement emergencies, with several newly independent states welcoming hundreds of thousands of refugees. In 1967, the Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees entered into force, supplementing the reinforcing the 1951 Refugee Convention.

A group of Rwandese waiting for the distribution of food rations at a refugee centre in Uganda’s Oruchinga Valley, 1964
© UNHCR/W.McCoy

UNHCR in the 1970s

UNHCR’s operations expanded into Latin America, Africa and Asia. For example, the flight of 10 million Bengalis to India in 1971 was one of the 20th century’s largest displacement emergencies and UNHCR acted as focal point for a vast relief operation. Another major exodus was sparked by the fall of Saigon to North Vietnam forces in 1975. An estimated 3 million people fled in the wake of the various conflicts in Indochina.

Vietnamese boat people arriving in Malaysia. They made it to shore after the small boat on which they had been travelling sank only a few metres from safety.
© UNHCR/K.Gaugler

UNHCR in the 1980s

In 1981, UNHCR received a second Nobel Peace Prize for what had become worldwide assistance to refugees. Major crises erupted and continued in the Horn of Africa, Afghanistan and Central America.

Guatemalan refugees in Chiapas, Mexico, 1984.
© UNHCR/L.Astrom

UNHCR in the 1990s

UNHCR continued to provide lifesaving support to refugees and displaced people in a decade that saw millions displaced by events such as the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Gulf War, the Bosnian conflict and the Rwandan Genocide.

Albania, 1998. Refugees from Kosovo are taken by truck to stay with host families.  
© UNHCR/Betty Press

UNHCR in the 2000s

Global displacement levels declined steadily until the middle of the 2000s but started rising again owing to a series of conflicts in the Middle East and Africa. UNHCR was also called upon to help millions of people displaced internally by conflict, and expanded its work helping the stateless.

Democratic Republic of Congo, 2008. Thousands of Congolese flee the site for internally displaced people after gunfire was heard in the surrounding area of Kibati.
© UNHCR/Paul Taggart

UNHCR in the 2010s

Numbers of refugees and internally displaced people rose sharply in the 2010s – what became known as a ‘Decade of Displacement’. By the end of 2019, forcibly displaced people accounted for 1% of the world’s population, or around 80 million people.

Greece, 2015. Syrian refugees arrive on the island of Lesvos after travelling in an inflatable raft across the Mediterranean from Turkey. 
© UNHCR/Andrew McConnell

UNHCR in 2020

The work of the UN Refugee Agency has never been more pressing and complex. Extreme poverty and climate change and their interrelation with wars and violence are changing the patterns of displacement. Only concerted international action and political will can resolve new and protracted conflicts and crises. Despite the challenges, UNHCR remains determined as ever to stay and deliver for people forced to flee their homes.

Juanida, a Rohingya refugee from Myanmar, has her temperature checked by a UNHCR staff member, before her registration interview in Lhokseumawe, northern Aceh province, Indonesia.
© UNHCR/Jiro Ose

WHO WE ARE

We are UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency.  

We protect people forced to flee their homes because of conflict and persecution.

We are present in 135 countries, helping millions of people by responding with life-saving support, safeguarding fundamental human rights and helping them build a better future. 

Video © UNHCR

TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT PEOPLE FORCED TO FLEE

We want to create a world where every person forced to flee can build a better future.
We are part of a global effort to create a fairer and more sustainable world. Join us in making this a reality.

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