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Due to expanding globalisation and a growing number of intra-national and international conflicts, the number of people moving across national and international borders is rapidly increasing. It is crucial that policymakers, mental health professionals, and other service providers address the health and psychosocial needs of these people for whom they are responsible, including their mental health. Migration is an important risk factor for mental disorders. People moving across national and international borders may face adverse conditions before, during, and after migration(1-7). Prior to migration, they may have been exposed to deprivation, persecution, violence, imprisonment, human rights violations, including sexual harassment and even torture(2, 8). Greater exposure to pre-migration traumatic experiences is consistently associated with depression, PTSD, and anxiety among migrants and refugees. Post-migration stress factors, including poor socio-economic resources, may have an even greater impact on mental health than pre-migration factors; these include lack of integration, unemployment, absent educational opportunities, family separation, language difficulties, limited social networks, and unclear residence status. These factors are particularly associated with depression risk(9) and may have greater impact on psychosis risk than pre-migratory stressors(10). Further risk factors in new communities can include social exclusion, stigma and discrimination(11). Post-migratory stressors also contribute to the development of trauma sequelae(12). The rate of mental disorders was described as twice as high among refugees than among economic migrants(13). Thus, there is an urgent need for large-scale interventions to address psychiatric disorders in refugees and forcibly displaced persons after displacement(14) The situation of forcibly displaced persons and migrants are worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic, which is having a major impact on public mental health. Fear of infection, the physical and mental sequelae of being infected, as well as grief and posttraumatic reactions upon the loss of loved ones increase the risk for mental health problems. The quarantine, physical distancing, and lockdown measures used to combat the epidemic also result in additional stresses that can worsen mental health, including social isolation, loneliness, loss of employment, financial crises, changes in the working environment, and concern over an uncertain future(15). Worry and uncertainty can precipitate or worsen acute depressive and anxiety symptoms and can increase the risk for serious mental illness, including panic and other anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and trauma-induced disorders(16, 17). Individuals with mental illness are one of the most vulnerable groups to COVID-19 because of the limitations imposed by their mental illness and their limited access to quality health care. They often are at increased risk of infection because their living conditions do not allow them to maintain basic hygiene and social distancing(18). Refugees and forcibly displaced persons with mental health problems are at especially high risk. As many as 80% of refugees live in low- and middle-income countries, where their access to quality mental health care is even more limited than before their displacement. They need enormous global support to cope with a rapidly evolving crisis(19), including in accessing physical and mental health care and in carrying out adequate preventive measures against infection. Elevated risk of adverse psychological effects including among healthcare workers, particularly those exposed to infected patients, was one of the key findings of a recent meta-analysis(20). The SARS-CoV-2 virus disregards all borders. Our global response must not overlook forcibly displaced people, refugees and migrants(19).