UNITED NATIONS (AP) 鈥 Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine has driven some 14 million Ukrainians from their homes in 鈥渢he fastest, largest displacement witnessed in decades,鈥 sparking an increase in the number of refugees and displaced people worldwide to more than 103 million, the U.N. refugee chief said Wednesday.

Filippo Grandi, who heads the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, told the U.N. Security Council that Ukrainians are about to face 鈥渙ne of the world鈥檚 harshest winters in extremely difficult circumstances,鈥 including the continuing destruction of civilian infrastructure that is 鈥渜uickly making the humanitarian response look like a drop in the ocean of needs.鈥

Humanitarian organizations have 鈥渄ramatically scaled up their response," he said, 鈥渂ut much more must be done, starting with an end to this senseless war.鈥

But given 鈥渢he likely protracted nature of the military situation," Grandi said his agency is preparing for further population movements both inside and outside Ukraine.

In his wide-ranging briefing, Grandi told members of the U.N.鈥檚 most powerful body that while Ukraine continues to grab headlines, his agency has responded to 37 emergencies around the world in the last 12 months arising from conflicts.

鈥淵et, the other crises are failing to capture the same international attention, outrage, resources, action,鈥 he said.

Grandi pointed to the more than 850,000 Ethiopians displaced in the first half of the year, and said the recent surge in conflict in that nation's northern Tigray region has had 鈥渁n even more devastating impact on civilians.鈥

The U.N. refugee agency is also in Myanmar, where the country鈥檚 military rulers are facing armed resistance and an estimated 500,000 people were displaced in the first half of the year, Grandi said.

Humanitarian access remains 鈥渁 huge challenge,鈥 he said, adding that a return home remains distant for the almost 1 million Rohingya Muslim refugees who fled from Myanmar to neighboring Bangladesh.

In Congo, brutal attacks including sexual violence against women have added more than 200,000 people to the 5.5 million already displaced in the country, Grandi said.

He lamented that 鈥渢he horrors鈥 he witnessed when he worked in Congo 25 years ago are repeating themselves, 鈥渨ith displacement being, once again, both a consequence of conflict and a complicating factor in the web of local and international tensions.鈥

Addressing a council responsible for ensuring international peace and security, Grandi said: 鈥淪urely we can do better in trying to bring peace to this beleaguered region.鈥

The refugee chief said these crises and others, including the longstanding issue of refugees from Afghanistan and Syria and the complex flow of migrants from the Americas, 鈥渁re not only fading from media attention but are being failed by global inaction.鈥

Reasons for displacement are also becoming more complex, with new factors forcing people to flee including the climate emergency, Grandi said.

He urged greater attention and much greater financing for preventing and adapting to the warming planet, warning that otherwise tensions and competition will grow 鈥渁nd spark wider conflict with deadly consequences, including displacement.

鈥淎nd what is a starker example of `loss and damage鈥 than being displaced and dispossessed from one鈥檚 home?鈥 he asked.

Last week, Grandi said he met emaciated Somalis who had walked for days to get help and whose children had died on the way, and Somali refugees 鈥減ushed into already drought-affected areas of Kenya.鈥

He praised the Kenyan government, despite its own challenges, for 鈥 making a landmark shift from encampment of refugees to inclusion 鈥 a transition that I hope all will robustly support.鈥

Grandi expressed hope that this month's U.N. summit on climate change in Egypt and the summit in the United Arab Emirates next year will take into account both climate鈥檚 link to conflict and the displacement it causes.

But Grandi said this is not enough. He said the U.N. refugee agency needs $700 million by the end of the year to avoid severe cuts in its services.

He further called for strengthened peacebuilding to prevent the recurrence of conflict, including by reinforcing the police, judiciary and local government in fragile countries. He said that security also must be improved for humanitarian workers who are under increasing threat and that the Security Council needs to overcome its divisions on humanitarian issues.

鈥淏ecause what I saw in Somalia last week was a condemnation of us all,鈥 Grandi said.

He pointed to 鈥渁 world of inequality where extraordinary levels of suffering are getting scandalously low levels of attention and resources,鈥 adding that those who contribute the least to global challenges such as climate change 鈥渁re suffering most from their consequences.鈥

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