Refugees in Korea and their supporters gathered at the Munhwa Jeongwon Art Hall in southwestern Seoul’s Geumcheon District for the 4th annual “Shall We Walk?” festival on Sunday, in anticipation and celebration of World Refugee Day 2025, which is observed globally on June 20. As of early 2025, there are about 123 million forcibly displaced people worldwide, organizers from NGO Refugee pNan said at the event. That number includes refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced people and others in need of international protection. Among them, about 40 million are people who have fled their countries and sought protection abroad or in refugee camps. The organizers pointed out that Korea is a signatory to the Refugee Convention and has its own Refugee Act, but Korea’s recognition rate remains very low, and the process takes an extremely long time. Refugees who come to Korea fleeing persecution in their home countries face a slow, uncertain process here. “Refugees are not a special kind of people. They are ordinary people just like us. When any of us go through the hardships of suffering
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