A report released on Friday by the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) has revealed that at least 23,465 foreign nationals have sought asylum in Nigeria as of July 2024.
Data from the UNHRC also showed that the figure comprises of 5,629 urban refugees and 17,836 asylum seekers, with most of the asylum seekers originating from Cameroun, Syria, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Lebanon, Chad, Palestine and Sudan.
Also corrobating the figure, the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons (NCFRMI), said 15,908 asylum seekers are from Cameroun, 988 from the Syrian Arab Republic, 254 from CAR and 292 from Sudan.
They also include 81 from the DRC, 36 from Chad, 46 from Palestine and 103 from other nationalities.
The Commission added that 9,430 of the refugees are children, while 5,689 and 2,706 are men and women, respectively.
“Since August 2022, over 22,000 persons fled Cameroun to Nigeria, with the majority located in Madagali, Mubi North, Mubi South and Michika local government areas in Adamawa State,” the report says.
“With the ongoing L2 registration exercise in Adamawa State, 14,736 asylum-seekers have been registered by UNHCR and NCFRMI as part of the response to the influx of asylum-seekers from Cameroon, most of whom are fleeing protracted violence in the Ambazonian War between security forces and armed groups.
“From our records, over 700,000 Camerounians have been displaced since the war broke out in September 2017.
“Furthermore, Nigeria registered an influx of 5,629 urban refugees as of July 2024. These refugees were from Cameroon (1,374), Niger (1,438), Central African Republic (940), Democratic Republic of the Congo (538), Syrian Arab Republic (510), Türkiye (416), Mali (82), Chad (55), Others (276).
“2,047 are men, 1,537 are women, and 2,045 are children, with the majority being between 18 and 59 years old.
“Trends indicate a minimal desire for repatriation among urban refugees (only two repatriated over a three-year period),” the UN agency said.