People fleeing Iraq have swelled the ranks of the world's refugees, according to a UN refugee agency report.
As of the end of last year, the world had 9.9 million refugees, a 14 per cent increase over the 8.7 million refugees recorded in 2005, reversing a five-year decline, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said in its 2006 Global Trendsreport.
The current total is the highest since 2002, when there were 10.6 million.
The report said the increase was largely due to the situation in Iraq, which by the end of 2006 had forced up to 1.5 million Iraqis to seek refuge in other countries, particularly Syria and Jordan.
But the largest group of refugees was the 2.1 million Afghans still living outside their homeland. After the Iraqis were the Sudanese, 686,000; Somalis, 460,000; and people from Congo and Burundi, about 400,000 each.
The refugee total omits the 4.3 million Palestinians in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza, who are under the auspices of a separate agency, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency. If added together, the total number of refugees under both agencies is more than 14 million.
The total also excludes some 24.5 million people who have had to flee conflict but remain within their countries and so are labelled "displaced" rather than refugees under international law.