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One in Six People Exposed to Conflict Worldwide (ACLED Report 2025)

Why is this in News?

  • ACLED (Armed Conflict Location and Event Data) released its 2025 global conflict assessment.
  • Key headline:
    • 831 million people exposed to conflict in 2025.
    • Roughly one in six people globally.
  • Reveals:
    • Sharp rise in violent events.
    • Increasing state involvement in violence, including against civilians.
    • Changing nature of warfare, especially use of commercial drones by non-state actors.

Relevance

  • GS II:
    • International relations, global conflict trends
    • Role of UN, multilateralism, peacekeeping
  • GS III:
    • Internal security: non-state actors, emerging technologies in warfare

What is ACLED?

  • An independent, globally recognised conflict data collection and analysis organisation.
  • Tracks:
    • Political violence.
    • Armed conflict.
    • Protest events.
  • Used by:
    • UN agencies.
    • Governments.
    • Researchers and humanitarian organisations.

Key Global Findings (2025)

Scale of Conflict

  • ~200,000 violent events recorded globally.
    • Nearly double compared to four years ago.
  • 10% of global population exposed to conflict environments.

Nature of Contemporary Conflicts

1. Increased Violence, Reduced Restraint

  • Armed actors show:
    • Higher willingness to use force.
    • Disregard for civilian harm.
  • Reflects erosion of:
    • International Humanitarian Law (IHL).
    • Norms protecting non-combatants.

2. Rising Role of State Forces

  • 74% of violent events involved state forces in 2025.
  • State-led violence against civilians:
    • Increased from 20% (2020) → 35% (2025).
  • Indicates:
    • Militarisation of internal conflicts.
    • Shrinking space for civilian protection.

Civilians at the Centre of Violence

  • 56,000+ incidents of violence directed at civilians.
    • Highest in the last five years.
  • Two critical patterns:
    • States increasingly targeting civilians.
    • Non-state groups causing the majority of fatalities.

Region-wise Trends

Europe

  • Largest increase in violence globally.
  • Driven overwhelmingly by:
    • Russia–Ukraine war.
  • Highest number of people affected since 2022 invasion.

West Asia

  • 48% decline in violent events compared to 2024.
  • Key reasons:
    • End of Syria’s civil war.
    • Ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon.
  • Reduced Israeli and Turkish air campaigns:
    • Led to 17% global drop in aerial warfare.

Africa

  • Continues to bear:
    • High civilian fatalities.
    • Complex multi-actor conflicts.
  • Sudan, DRC, Myanmar remain major hotspots.

State vs Non-State Actors: A Nuanced Picture

State Actors

  • Israel and Russia:
    • Responsible for ~90% of cross-border state violence targeting civilians.
  • Myanmar military:
    • Accounted for ~33% of state violence against its own civilians.

Non-State Armed Groups

  • Responsible for ~60% of civilian fatalities.
  • Major perpetrators:
    • Rapid Support Forces (RSF), Sudan:
      • 4,200 civilians killed.
      • ~11% of all non-state group fatalities globally.
    • Allied Democratic Forces (ADF):
      • ≥1,370 civilian deaths.
    • M23 movement (DRC):
      • 1,100 civilian deaths.
  • Numbers likely undercounted due to reporting gaps.

Technological Shift in Warfare

Weaponisation of Commercial Drones

  • 469 non-state armed groups have used drones at least once in last five years.
  • 14% increase over the previous year.
  • Significance:
    • Democratisation of military technology.
    • Low-cost, high-impact tools bypass traditional state monopoly on force.
    • Raises challenges for:
      • Airspace control.
      • Counter-terrorism.
      • Civilian safety.

Broader Implications

International Humanitarian Law (IHL)

  • Rising civilian targeting signals:
    • Weak enforcement of Geneva Conventions.
    • Normalisation of civilian harm.

Global Security

  • Conflicts are:
    • More frequent.
    • More lethal.
    • More fragmented.
  • Multi-actor conflicts harder to resolve diplomatically.

Humanitarian Impact

  • Increased displacement.
  • Food insecurity.
  • Collapse of health and education systems in conflict zones.

India and Global Governance Lens

  • Reinforces need for:
    • Stronger multilateral conflict prevention.
    • UN Security Council reform.
    • Regulation of emerging military technologies (drones, AI).
  • Relevant for India’s role in:
    • UN peacekeeping.
    • Global South diplomacy.
    • Norm-building on warfare ethics.

December 2025
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