Between November 2024 and June 2025, DTM field teams recorded approximately 1,337,117 returnees across 1,140 locations in Aj Jazirah (71%), Sennar (13%), Khartoum (8%), White Nile (5%), River Nile (2%), and West Darfur (<1%).
Between 11 and 12 July, DTM field teams estimated that 675 households were displaced from Al Kordi and Shag Alnom villages in Bara locality, North Kordofan due to heightened insecurity.
South Sudan is currently facing a severe humanitarian crisis characterised by extensive internal displacement. The underlying causes of these displacement dynamics are varied and include communal clashes, land disputes, insecurity, violence, disasters, and cross-border movements.
The Migration, Environment, and Climate Change (MECC) Country Report on Yemen by IOM explores the complex links between climate change, environmental degradation, and human mobility in Yemen.
The Sudan Mobility Update provides a summary of the total IDP population in Sudan, including those displaced both before and after the onset of the conflict on 15 April 2023.
Following the rapid power shift in Damascus on 8 December 2024, the Syrian Arab Republic (henceforth referred to as Syria) is undergoing a pivotal transformation, reshaping its humanitarian, political, demographic, and recovery landscape.
North Darfur remained an epicenter of clashes since the onset of the conflict on 15 April 2023: an estimated 781,998 individuals (155,602 households) were displaced from Al Fasher town and Zamzam IDP Camp.
In September and October 2024, IOM DTM conducted a durable solutions and intentions assessment across 1,360 locations in Ta’iz, Lahj, and Ma’rib governorates.The objective was to better understand the future intentions of conflict-affected populations and inform planning for durable solutions.
On 27 June 2025, DTM field teams estimated that 3,200 households were displaced from Al Gantor village in Babanusa locality, West Kordofan due to clashes between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
Between 18 and 21 June 2025, DTM field teams estimated that 253 households were displaced from Abu Shouk IDP camp and Al Fasher town, Al Fasher locality due to heightened insecurity and deteriorating economic conditions.