refugee camp in Chad (1946–49) The largest refugee settlements in the world are in the eastern
Sahel region of Africa. For many years the
Dadaab complex was the largest until it was surpassed by
Bidi Bidi in 2017. Bidi Bidi was in turn surpassed by Bangladesh's
Kutupalong refugee camp in 2018.
Africa • A number of camps in the south of
Chad – such as Dosseye, Kobitey, Mbitoye, Danamadja, Sido, Doyaba and Djako – host approximately 113,000 refugees from
Central African Republic. • Ali Addeh (or
Ali Adde) and
Holhol camps in Djibouti host 23,000 refugees, who are mainly from Somalia, but also Ethiopians and Eritreans. • Benaco and Ngara in Tanzania. •
Buduburam refugee camp in Ghana, home to more than 12,000 Liberians (opened 1990) • Bwagiriza and
Gatumba refugee camps in Burundi host refugees from the DRC. • By 2013 there were four camps in
Maban County,
South Sudan, hosting refugees and internally displaced people. Yusuf Batil camp was home to 37,000 refugees,
Doro camp to 44,000, Jamam camp to 20,000 and Gendrassa camp to 10,000. These population numbers are subject to fluctuation during the ongoing violence in the country. •
Cameroon hosted more than 240,000 UNHCR registered refugees in 2014, mainly from the
Central African Republic: Minawao refugee camp in the north and Gado Badzere, Borgop, Ngam, Timangolo,
Mbilé and Lolo refugee camps in the east of Cameroon. •
Choucha camp in
Tunisia hosted nearly 20,000 refugees from 13 countries who fled from Libya in 2011. Half of them are sub-Saharan African and Arab refugees and the other half are Bangladeshis who had been working in Libya. 3,000 refugees remained in the camp in 2012, and 1,300 in 2013 and its closure is planned. •
Comè in Benin hosted Togolese refugees until it was closed in 2006. •
Dadaab refugee camps (Ifo, Ifo II, Dagahaley, Hagadera, and Kambioos) in North Eastern Kenya, established in 1991 and now hosting more than 330,000 refugees from Somalia. •
Dzaleka camp in the
Dowa District of
Malawi is home to 34,000 refugees from Burundi, the DRC and Rwanda. •
Hart Sheik in Ethiopia hosted more than 250,000 mostly refugees from Somalia between 1988 and 2004. •
Itang camp in Ethiopia hosted 182,000 refugees from South Sudan and was the world's largest refugee camp for some time during the 1990s. •
Jomvu, Hatimy and Swaleh Nguru camps near Mombasa, Kenya, were closed in 1997. Refugees, mainly displaced people from Somalia, were either forced to relocate to Kakuma, repatriated or remunerated to voluntarily relocate into unsafe areas in Somalia. Other closed camps in the area include
Liboi, Oda, Walda, Thika, Utange and Marafa. •
Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya was opened in 1991. In 2014, it was the third largest refugee camp worldwide. • Kala, Meheba and Mwange camps in the northwest of
Zambia host refugees from Angola and DRC. • Lainé and
Kouankan (I & II) camps in Guinea hosted nearly 29,300 refugees mostly from Liberia, Sierra Leone, and
Côte d'Ivoire. The number reduced to 15,000 in 2009. •
Lazaret in Niger was the largest camp in the Sahel during the extreme drought of 1973–1975 and mainly hosted
Tuareg people. •
Lusenda refugee camp in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo houses Burundian refugees from across the border. • M'Bera camp in southeastern
Mauritania hosts 50,000 Malian refugees. • Mentao camp in
Burkina Faso hosts 13,000 Malian refugees. •
Nyarugusu refugee camp in Tanzania opened in 1997 and initially hosted 60.000 refugees from the DRC. Due to the recent conflicts in Burundi, it also hosts 90.000 refugees from Burundi. In 2014 it was the 9th largest refugee camp. However, since the conflict in Burundi it is considered one of the world's biggest and most overcrowded camps. •
Osire camp in central Namibia was established in 1992 to accommodate refugees from Angola, Burundi, the DRC, Rwanda and Somalia. It had 20,000 inhabitants in 1998 and only 3,000 in 2014. • PTP camp near Zwedru, Bahn camp and Little Wlebo camp in eastern
Liberia is home to 12,000 refugees from
Ivory Coast. •
Ras Ajdir camp, close to the Tunisian border in Libya, was opened in 2011 and is housing between 20,000 and 30,000
Libyan refugees. •
Sahrawi refugee camps near
Tindouf, South Western
Algeria, were opened circa 1976 and are called Laayoune, Smara, Awserd, 27 February, Rabouni,
Daira of Bojador and Dakhla. • There are 12 camps in the east of
Chad hosting approximately 250,000
Sudanese refugees from the
Darfur region in
Sudan. These camps are in
Breidjing, Oure Cassoni, Mile, Treguine, Iridimi, Touloum, Kounoungou, Goz Amer, Farchana, Am Nabak, Gaga and Djabal. Some of these camps appear in the documentary
Google Darfur. • There are 12 camps, such as Shagarab and Wad Sharifey, in eastern
Sudan. They host around 66,000 mostly Eritrean refugees, the first of whom arrived in 1968. In 2014 the Dolo Odo camps (Melkadida, Bokolmanyo, Buramino, Kobe Camp, Fugnido, Hilaweyn and Adiharush) were considered to be the second largest. • There are a rapidly growing number of camps in Uganda, such as
Nakivale,
Kayaka II,
Kyangwali and
Rwamwanja. They host 170,000 refugees from South Sudan and the Democratic Republic Of Congo. •
Tongogara Refugee Camp in Zimbabwe was established for Mozambican refugees in 1984 and housed 58,000 of them in 1994.
Asia •
Ban Mai Nai Soi refugee camp in Burma hosted 19,512
Karenni people in 2008. •
Champtala is a camp in Afghanistan that hosts Afghan refugees who returned from Pakistan. •
Galang Refugee Camp in
Indonesia accommodated
Indochinese refugees between 1979 and 1996. •
Mae La refugee camp in Thailand hosted around 40,000 Burmese in 2020, most whom were
Karen ethnicity. It is the largest of a series of refugee camps coordinated by the Karen Refugee Committee in Thailand. •
Niatak and
Torbat-e Jam camps in Iran host Afghan refugees. •
Philippine Refugee Processing Center for Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cambodian refugees fleeing wars in
Indochina. • There are a number of camps in Nepal, such as the three
Beldangi refugee camps,
Goldhap,
Khudunabari,
Sanischare and
Timai hosting
Bhutanese refugees. They are
Lhotshampas who were forced to flee from Bhutan to Nepal. • There are a number of camps in
Pakistan that host
Afghan refugees, such as Panian,
Nasir Bagh,
Old Shamshatoo, Old Akora, Gamkol, Barakai,
Badaber, Girdi Jungle,
Azakhel and Saranan.
Jelazee camp, which also hosted Afghan refugees was closed in 2001, because of security concerns. • There are a number of camps, such as
Puzhal, for
Sri Lankan Tamils, established in
Tamil Nadu in India in 1983, with over 110,000 refugees by 1998. • There are two camps,
Nayapara and
Kutupalong, in south-eastern
Bangladesh hosting 30,000 registered
Rohingya people who fled from
Myanmar. It is estimated that 200,000 undocumented Rohingya refugees are living outside the camps with little access to humanitarian assistance. Kutupalong camp may become one of the world's largest refugee camps as there are plans to extend it, so up to 800,000 Rohingya refugees can be housed. • There were a number of camps on the Thai-Cambodian border in Thailand which hosted
Khmer people and
Vietnamese between 1979 and 1993 (see
Indochina refugee crisis and
Cambodian humanitarian crisis), such as
Nong Samet,
Nong Chan,
Sa Kaeo,
Site Two, and
Khao-I-Dang. There were also camps in the Thai-Laotian border region, hosting
Hmong people and Laotians, such as
Ban Vinai and
Nong Khai. These camps existed between 1975, and final closure in the 1990s. •
Whitehead Camp, Hong Kong, considered the "world's largest prison" in the early 1990s
Middle East , January 2025 • Al Kharaz in
Yemen hosts 14,000 refugees from Somalia who crossed the Gulf of Aden. • Al-Mazraq camps (1–3) host around 24,000 internally displaced persons in Yemen. • Camps for
Syrian refugees in
Iraqi Kurdistan, including Domiz in
Dohuk Governorate, Arbat in
Sulaymaniyah, and Qushtapa, Basirma, Gawilan, Kawergosk and Darashakran in
Erbil Governorate. (see also
Syrian refugee camps in Iraqi Kurdistan) • Camps for
Syrian refugees in
Turkey, such as Urfa,
Kilis Oncupinar,
Gaziantep and those in the
Hatay Province that were opened in 2011 (see also
Syrian refugee camps in Turkey). •
Immigrant camps (Israel) (1947–1950) and
Ma'abarot transition camps (1950–1963) to accommodate
Jewish refugees and immigrants in Israel. •
Mrajeeb Al Fhood refugee camp in Jordan, hosting 4,200 and
Azraq camp, hosting 26,000
Syrian refugees. •
Palestinian refugee camps were opened between 1948 and 1968. The 59 camps are recognized by the
UNRWA and host 1.5 million refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Today the former camps were developed to towns. These towns contain the world's largest and oldest refugee population.
Yarmouk camp, just outside Damascus, is one of them and was once home to half a million Palestinian refugees (about 18,000 in 2015). It has been besieged by Bashar al-Assad's regime in
2012 and came again under attack by the Islamic State group in
2015. • There are camps for displaced Syrians within Syria such as
Qah or the Olive Tree Camp. • Three camps received
Palestinian refugees from Iraq: Al Tanf,
Al Hol and
Al Waleed. There are around 2,000 refugees in Al Hol and in Al Waleed camp, which is on the Iraqi side of the border. Al Tanf, which was on the Syrian side and hosted 1,600 Palestinians, was closed in 2010. An effort was made to close Al Tanf because the refugees' freedom of movement was severely restricted and the desert environment, with its sandstorms and extreme temperatures, was too harsh. Most of the refugees who lived there were resettled to third countries. •
Zaatari refugee camp in
Jordan, hosting 144,000
Syrian refugees as of July 2013, although the population in November 2013 had dropped to around 112,000 as the
Syrian civil war continues.
Europe •
Cyprus internment camps (1946–1949) to accommodate
Jewish refugees and
Holocaust survivors •
Ħal Far,
Malta, for African immigrants. •
Lampedusa immigrant reception center for refugees, asylum seekers and other immigrants on the Italian island of
Lampedusa. •
Moria, Oreokastro,
Katsikas,
Idomeni, and other camps on the Greek islands of
Lesbos,
Samos, and
Chios have rapidly filled (up to 3–4 times more than their official capacity) with migrants fleeing violence in the Middle East and Africa. Since
2015, refugees fleeing conflict such as the
Syrian Civil War have attempted to enter Europe but are often stopped in Greece, where they spend, on average, 8 months to a year in camps. Some camps have been destroyed or evacuated, including the evacuation of 4,000 residents from a camp on the island of Lesbos (capacity 1,500) from a tent fire that destroyed more than half the camp. on the Thai-Cambodian border, May 1984 •
Bagnoli camp in Naples, Italy, housed up to 10,000 refugees from Eastern Europe between 1946 and 1951. •
Čardak was a camp in Serbia, for Serbs who fled from Croatia and Bosnia. •
Friedland refugee camp in Germany hosted refugees who fled from the
former eastern territories of Germany at the end of World War II, between 1944 and 1950. Between 1950 and 1987 it was a transit centre for
East German (GDR) citizens who wanted to flee to West Germany (FRG). • International Refugee Organization camp at Lesum, near Bremen, Germany. •
Kjesäter in Sweden was a refugee camp and transit centre for Norwegian refugees fleeing Nazi persecution during World War II. •
Kløvermarken in Denmark was a refugee camp that hosted 19,000 German refugees between 1945 and 1949. •
La Linière and
Basroch camps in
Grande-Synthe, on the outskirts of
Dunkirk, northern France (destroyed by fire on 11 April 2017). •
Sangatte camp and the
Calais jungle in northern France. • The
Oksbøl Refugee Camp was the largest camp for German Refugees in Denmark after World War II. • There are two Emergency Transit Centres for refugees in Europe. One in
Timișoara, Romania, and one in
Humenné, Slovakia. They can provide a temporary safe haven for refugees who needed to be evacuated immediately from life-threatening situations before being resettled. •
Traiskirchen camp in eastern Austria hosts refugees that come to Europe as part of the
European migrant crisis. •
Vrela Ribnička refugee camp in Montenegro was built in 1994 and houses refugees of Bosnian origin who were displaced during the
Yugoslav Wars. ==Refugee camps by country and population==