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In pictures: World Refugee Day

A community thrives when it fosters inclusion and extends opportunities to all

Update : 23 Jun 2025, 05:04 PM

We marked World Refugee Day, on Friday, a moment to honor the courage and strength of refugees across the globe, as we also reflect on their stories of loss and pain.

We are living through volatile times. At the end of 2024, an estimated 123.2 million people worldwide were forcibly displaced due to persecution, conflict, human rights violations and other events. As displacement remains at record levels, conflicts go unresolved, civilians are under attack - and humanitarian aid is being slashed, putting millions of lives at risk.

In moments like these, when fear and division seem louder than compassion, our collective voices matter more than ever. Today we make a call to act, to choose empathy over apathy, to translate solidarity into meaningful change.

This World Refugee Day, we wish to send a clear message: “We see you. You are not forgotten. You are not alone.” Together, we have the power to make a real difference. Refugees need our solidarity, as do the communities who host them, such as the brave Bangladeshis who continue to open their hearts and their homes to hapless Rohingya who live in limbo, without citizenship or rights in their homeland.

Together, we can build a community that opens doors instead of slamming them shut. A place where everyone belongs.

In a refugee camp where shelters are built from bamboo and tarpaulin, the risk of fires breaking out can have devastating consequences on a community. Refugee volunteers are trained to become first responders in the care of fire outbreaks. Photo: Shari Nijman/UNHCR

Nur Kaisel, 15, loves sports, especially football. After school, he plays with his friends if he is not taking care of his younger siblings or working as a youth volunteer. Kaisel’s family fled violence in Myanmar when he was only seven years old. Over the past year, regular physical therapy, exercises, and prostheses have greatly improved his mobility, allowing him to participate fully in school and other activities. Photo: Shari Nijman/UNHCR

Since 2022, some 8,000 young people living in the Cox’s Bazar camps have participated in skills development training, among the few opportunities for growth available to youth in these sprawling camps. Installing and maintaining solar systems is one of several vocational training courses offered to young people in the camps in Cox’s Bazar by UNHCR. Other courses include plumbing, sewing machine operation, community health work and agriculture. Photo: Shari Nijman/UNHCR

Rohingya children enjoy a game of ludo at a community centre at Bhasan Char. The community centre is a meeting place, often a one- or multi-storied integrated protection services centre, where people of all age groups come to spend their leisure time or participate in various recreational, social or other soft skill training activities. Photo: Brac

The Cox’s Bazar camps are highly congested with many parts developed spontaneously by the refugees without proper site planning when they first arrived — increasing exposure to risks like landslides and flooding. This is the most complex shelter and site development response globally, due to challenges such as the temporary materials, increasing population, natural disasters and fire hazards, compounded with the insecurity. Photo: Shari Nijman/UNHCR

The once bare treeless landscape of the camps – a result of firewood collection for cooking by hundreds of thousands of newly arrived refugees – is now a leafy green due to a vast reforestation effort led by UN agencies and working NGOs. Since 2018, more than 2,300 hectares of protected forest have been brought back to life, enabled by regreening efforts and the distribution of LPG for cooking to all refugee families. Photo: IOM

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres and Chief Adviser Professor Dr. Muhammad Yunus shared a historic Ramadan solidarity iftar in the Rohingya refugee camps. Photo: Hossain Ahammod Masum/IOM Bangladesh 2025

WFP is facing severe funding shortfalls that put food assistance for over 1 million Rohingya refugees at risk. The potential cuts come at a time when malnutrition is already above emergency levels amidst a worsening security situation in the camps. Another round of cuts would not only deepen hunger and malnutrition but also expose families to protection and security risks, particularly for women and girls. Photo: WFP/Saikat Mojumder

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