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Rohingya Muslim crisis: 145,000 children fleeing Burma face malnutrition
www.thestateless.com/2017/10/rohingya-muslim-crisis-145000-children-fleeing-burma-face-malnutrition.html
Rohingya-children-wait-for-food-handouts-at-Thangkhali-refugee-camp-in-Coxs-Bazar-Bangladesh-5-October-2017.-AP-Photo-Zakir-Hossain-Chowdhury.jpg
Rohingya children wait for food handouts at Thangkhali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, 5 October 2017. AP Photo/Zakir Hossain Chowdhury
By Mythili Sampath kumar, Independent
Over 500,000 Rohingya Muslim refugees have fled to Bangladesh in the last six weeks
Of the half a million Rohingya refugees that have poured into Bangladesh, approximately 145,000 are children under the age of five at risk of malnutrition.

According to the Disasters Emergency Committee charity, at least 14,000 Rohingya refugee children in Bangladesh are already suffering from “severe acute malnutrition.”

More than 50,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women are also in dire need of proper food rations.

The influx of Rohingya from the western Burmese state of Rakhine into Bangladesh since 25 August is “the world’s fastest developing refugee emergency,” according to the United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres.

Evan Schuurman, spokesperson for Save the Children’s humanitarian response team in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, told The Independentthe “sheer speed” at which the crisis has escalated which provides the biggest challenge for relief efforts and providing aid to children and families.

Responding from Bangladesh, Mr Schuurman said that amounts to an average of 10,000 people a day, every day, in the last six weeks. “It’s truly staggering.”

According to Mr Guterres’ spokesperson Farhan Haq, there were already approximately 200,000 Rohingya in Bangladesh before the latest deluge of people began.

Steve Taravella, WFP’s senior spokesperson told The Independent that though this crisis mimics others in terms of “desperation, violence, separated families, blocked access to aid, people too weak from hunger to walk on their own” the situation is exacerbated by Bangladesh’s own problems.

“The flow of people is constant and rapid and overwhelming a country that is struggling to manage its own development needs.”

Another issue in Bangladesh this time a year – monsoon season.

Mr Schuurman said the rains have hit the country “particularly hard” this season, causing flooding, transportation, and logistics issues for aid workers.

It “has put huge pressure on host communities and basic services,” he explained.

An inundation of illegal drugs over the Burmese border and smaller share of existing food and clean water resources are concerns for poorer villagers in the region.

Climate change has been a primary concern for the South Asian country, but in order to help the influx of newly arrived refugees Bangladesh has taken deforestation to make room for expanded tent communities.

“The government allocated 2,000 acres when the number of refugees was nearly 400,000,” the Secretary of Disaster Management and Relief Mohammad Shah Kamal told Reuters.

At least 1,000 acres more have been allocated to accommodate up to 150,000 makeshift tarpaulin shelters.

As more and more trees are cut down, the natural habitat of animals like elephants is increasingly encroached upon.

Wild elephants crushed two refugees to death in September and authorities fear it could happen again.

The Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination and persecution by the majority Buddhist population in Myanmar, where they are denied citizenship despite centuries-old roots in the country.

The current crisis erupted when an insurgent Rohingya group attacked police posts in Rakhine state, killing a dozen security personnel — an act that Mr Guterres condemned.

The attacks prompted Burma’s military to launch “clearance operations” against the rebels, setting off a wave of violence that has left hundreds dead, thousands of homes burned and began the mass exodus.

The UN has called on Burma and its controversial, once-hailed, prominent politician Aung San Suu Kyi to allow for the safe return of Rohingya to their homes.

Ms Suu Kyi’s position as state counsellor does not give her authority over the military, but the international criticism is for her failure to speak out against alleged human rights abuses – including mass killings, gang rapes, and the burning of villages.

The UN has made an appeal of $434 million to assist more than a million people for the coming six months.

The hope is that the political situation will be resolved by then in order to avoid an enduring crisis, for which Bangladesh and its already struggling economy will likely have to bear the financial brunt.

Further complicating the relief response to help these refugees is the growing refugee and famine crises in the rest of the world. Nearly 20 million are on the brink of famine in Sudan, Nigeria, Somalia, and Yemen.

Syrian refugees are still living in camps in Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey.

The World Food Programme did receive a contribution from the US government to the tune of $1.18bn but Mr Taravella said that though this is “an enormous help at the global level” the agency cannot apply any of it to this particular crisis.

WFP is currently providing rice rations for about 580,000 people at the moment however in order to fully address food-based needs in Bangladesh for the next six months, WFP would need $73.2 million – that would ensure rations for one million people to include new arrivals, refugees who fled before August 2017, actual registered refugees, and people living within host communities who still need help.

The agency would also require around $7m for logistics and emergency telecommunications.

So far, about $20m of the total $80m has been secured through country contributions from Europe, US, UK, Australia, and Canada. But, Mr Taravella estimated that would only cover food rations up to middle of November of this year.
Agencies contributed to this report.
 
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Nowhere To Go
www.thestateless.com/2012/09/nowhere-to-go.html
burmese-rohingya.jpg

Reviled in Myanmar and unwanted in Bangladesh, where does one of the world’s most persecuted minorities really belong?
Children in the Rohingya refugee camps have to battle malnutrition, diarrhoea, malaria and other diseases [Lianain Films]

The Rohingya are a stateless people described by the UN as one of the world’s most persecuted minorities.
They are reviled in Myanmar, the country many Rohingya call home, and unwelcome in neighbouring Bangladesh, where tens of thousands live in refugee camps.
And now they could be facing their worst crisis yet.

Violent ethnic clashes in Myanmar’s Rakhine state have led to calls for their expulsion from the country. Boatloads of Rohingya refugees have been denied entry into Bangladesh. Those already there live on the fringes of society, undocumented and at risk of exploitation.

Connect With 101 East

In late May, news broke of the brutal rape and murder of a Buddhist woman in Myanmar’s Rakhine state. It was, by all accounts, a horrific crime.
What made it worse for some was that the alleged perpetrators were men from the Muslim Rohingya minority.

Five days later a crowd attacked a bus and killed nine Muslims in what appeared to be a retaliatory attack. The clashes erupted suddenly, and ferociously.

Rakhine state has since become the scene of more violence. Entire villages have been burnt down and people driven from their homes. Both sides accuse each other of atrocities and the Myanmar government has declared a state of emergency in the region.

Tens of thousands of Rohingya people now live in refugee camps, with their movements being restricted.
In Myanmar they are not recognised as citizens and their access to opportunities are severely curtailed.

In the aftermath of the Rakhine riots, human rights observers fear they might become the target of more discrimination.
Myanmar does not want them. But neither does neighbouring Bangladesh, the country with the second-largest concentration of the Rohingya.

So where do the Rohingya really belong? 101 East looks at who should take responsibility for the community.
 
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MYANMAR MILITARY DEPLOYS ‘FOUR CUTS’ STRATEGY AGAINST ROHINGYA CIVILIANS
www.thestateless.com/2017/09/myanmar-military-deploys-four-cuts-strategy-against-rohingya-civilians.html
myanmar-myint-.jpg

By ERC
The scorched earth strategy was masterminded by Dictator General Ne Win in 1963, who was inspired by Japan’s ‘THREE ALLS’ (‘Kill all, Burn all and Loot all’) tactics.
It was called ‘SWEEPING’ an area “suspected villagers and burning their villages”.

The Four Cuts is intended to cut off food, funds, intelligence and recruits to ethnic insurgencies. Often referred as “NO MAN’S LAND” policy in 1990s, it is directly commanded by the office of commander-in-chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing.

The War Office ordered to execute “anyone including children, women and elderly persons” after Rohingya insurgents clashed with Myanmar police on August 25, 2017.

Min Aung Hlaing’s army now deploys the Four Cuts policy, sweeping Rohingya-majority townships – Maungdaw, Buthidaung and Rathedaung by burning, looting, killing and displacing countless of Rohingya.

It directly cuts off food, aid and communication, essential for Rohingya population in the region.

The strategy has already led to more than 3,500 Rohingya civilian deaths, particularly in the isolated Rathedaung, which is the farthest of three townships from the Myanmar-Bangladesh border, and whereabouts of tens of thousands of Rohingya civilians are yet to be known.

It also destroyed at least 5,000 Rohingya infrastructures including schools and religious buildings.

More than 76,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh, and hundreds of thousands remain stranded at the border while many boats capsized killing women and children. An estimated 30% of Rohingya population in the three townships is being displaced as the Four Cuts Strategy speeds up.

The continued violations of human rights as its multitude of destructions of Rohingya civilians’ properties and lives, clearly amount to “crimes against humanity”.

The international silence must now be broken before it is too late.
The U.N. Fact-finding mission is needed more than ever now.
 
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12:00 AM, October 07, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 06:06 AM, October 07, 2017
Women and Girls: The hardest hit Rohingya refugees
women_and_girls.jpg

A group of young Rohingya girls collect drinking water for their families from a local pump in Balhukali settlement, Bangladesh. Credit: Aurélie Marrier d'Unienville/Oxfam
Paolo Lubrano
Of the nearly half a million Rohingya refugees who've fled across the border and have sought refuge in Bangladesh, women and girls are the most at risk, sleeping under open skies, roadsides, and forest areas with little or no protection.

More than two-thirds have no shelter, half have no drinking water, and with the existing camps and host communities underequipped to deal with such a large influx, the ground situation is chaotic and volatile. We at Oxfam are seriously concerned about abuse and exploitation of women and children.

The majority of Rohingya refugees are women and children. Initial assessments suggest that 53 percent are female, 58 percent are under the age of 18, and 10 percent are either pregnant or lactating mothers. Many have lost their families, communities, and all their possessions, and after an emotionally and physically gruelling journey across the border, they are left with little hope.

They are greeted with overburdened camps and impoverished communities. The already appalling ground conditions have only been made worse by the recent torrential downpours which have also slowed delivery of aid and construction of facilities like wells, toilets, and shelter. There are reports of outbreaks of fevers, respiratory infections, dysentery, and diarrhoea.

The scale of the needs is enormous with a majority struggling for life-saving essentials like clean drinking water, food, medical supplies and essential facilities. In early September, the humanitarian partners estimated that 58 million litters of water is needed daily, 1.5 million kilos of rice is needed every month, and that 60,000 shelters, 20,000 toilets, and identifying land for more camps are among the most pressing needs. As the influx grows, so do the needs, and those of women, girls, and young children must be more carefully assessed and elaborated.

As of September 25, 2017, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), identified 180 cases of sexual violence against women and girls. Given the lack of safe spaces and reporting mechanisms, this figure can only be seen as the tip of the iceberg. Further, as William Lacy Swing, the Director General of the UN Migration Agency rightly puts it in his media statement, it is impossible to understand the scale of violence just by the number of reported cases.

The forms of violence include, and is not limited to, rape, sexual assault, domestic violence, and emotional abuse. A significant number of teenage girls are married, many are with children and pregnant, which makes the challenge of supporting them even more urgent.

Oxfam has so far supported nearly 140,000 people by providing clean drinking water and emergency food supplies, and by building facilities like tube wells and toilets in camps. Our dignity kits will include hygiene items for women, girls, and children.

We are also supporting local government and partners to design and build camps that are better equipped to meet the needs of the refugee population, especially women and girls. We advocate for adequate facilities to ensure that their safety and wellbeing are protected. For example, separate toilets, bathing areas, social spaces, and well-lit and safe access paths are essential to ensure protection of women and children. When there is a lack of child and women-friendly spaces, the risk of exploitation and violence is much higher.

Prevention of and support to the survivors of sexual and gender-based violence must be increased significantly. We underline the need for psycho-social support for all women, girls, and children, and especially those who've survived acts of violence.

We commend the efforts of the Bangladesh government, humanitarian partners, and local communities in providing life-saving assistance for the nearly half a million refugees. However, less than half the funding for the USD 77 million appeal launched by the humanitarian community a month ago has been committed so far.

Since then, the number of refugees has nearly doubled, the influx continues, and the needs of the more vulnerable populations such as women, girls, and children are yet to be fully responded to. Oxfam asks the governments, donors, and individuals to act now so that we can provide life-saving support immediately.
Paolo Lubrano is Oxfam's Regional Humanitarian Manager for Asia.
Copyright: Inter Press Service

http://www.thedailystar.net/opinion...hingya-refugee-crisis-women-and-girls-1472602
 
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12:00 AM, October 07, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 06:06 AM, October 07, 2017
Women and girls: The hardest hit Rohingya refugees
women_and_girls.jpg

A group of young Rohingya girls collect drinking water for their families from a local pump in Balhukali settlement, Bangladesh. Credit: Aurélie Marrier d'Unienville/Oxfam
Paolo Lubrano
Of the nearly half a million Rohingya refugees who've fled across the border and have sought refuge in Bangladesh, women and girls are the most at risk, sleeping under open skies, roadsides, and forest areas with little or no protection.

More than two-thirds have no shelter, half have no drinking water, and with the existing camps and host communities underequipped to deal with such a large influx, the ground situation is chaotic and volatile. We at Oxfam are seriously concerned about abuse and exploitation of women and children.

The majority of Rohingya refugees are women and children. Initial assessments suggest that 53 percent are female, 58 percent are under the age of 18, and 10 percent are either pregnant or lactating mothers. Many have lost their families, communities, and all their possessions, and after an emotionally and physically gruelling journey across the border, they are left with little hope.

They are greeted with overburdened camps and impoverished communities. The already appalling ground conditions have only been made worse by the recent torrential downpours which have also slowed delivery of aid and construction of facilities like wells, toilets, and shelter. There are reports of outbreaks of fevers, respiratory infections, dysentery, and diarrhoea.

The scale of the needs is enormous with a majority struggling for life-saving essentials like clean drinking water, food, medical supplies and essential facilities. In early September, the humanitarian partners estimated that 58 million litters of water is needed daily, 1.5 million kilos of rice is needed every month, and that 60,000 shelters, 20,000 toilets, and identifying land for more camps are among the most pressing needs. As the influx grows, so do the needs, and those of women, girls, and young children must be more carefully assessed and elaborated.

As of September 25, 2017, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), identified 180 cases of sexual violence against women and girls. Given the lack of safe spaces and reporting mechanisms, this figure can only be seen as the tip of the iceberg. Further, as William Lacy Swing, the Director General of the UN Migration Agency rightly puts it in his media statement, it is impossible to understand the scale of violence just by the number of reported cases.

The forms of violence include, and is not limited to, rape, sexual assault, domestic violence, and emotional abuse. A significant number of teenage girls are married, many are with children and pregnant, which makes the challenge of supporting them even more urgent.

Oxfam has so far supported nearly 140,000 people by providing clean drinking water and emergency food supplies, and by building facilities like tube wells and toilets in camps. Our dignity kits will include hygiene items for women, girls, and children.

We are also supporting local government and partners to design and build camps that are better equipped to meet the needs of the refugee population, especially women and girls. We advocate for adequate facilities to ensure that their safety and wellbeing are protected. For example, separate toilets, bathing areas, social spaces, and well-lit and safe access paths are essential to ensure protection of women and children. When there is a lack of child and women-friendly spaces, the risk of exploitation and violence is much higher.

Prevention of and support to the survivors of sexual and gender-based violence must be increased significantly. We underline the need for psycho-social support for all women, girls, and children, and especially those who've survived acts of violence.

We commend the efforts of the Bangladesh government, humanitarian partners, and local communities in providing life-saving assistance for the nearly half a million refugees. However, less than half the funding for the USD 77 million appeal launched by the humanitarian community a month ago has been committed so far.

Since then, the number of refugees has nearly doubled, the influx continues, and the needs of the more vulnerable populations such as women, girls, and children are yet to be fully responded to. Oxfam asks the governments, donors, and individuals to act now so that we can provide life-saving support immediately.
Paolo Lubrano is Oxfam's Regional Humanitarian Manager for Asia.
Copyright: Inter Press Service

http://www.thedailystar.net/opinion...hingya-refugee-crisis-women-and-girls-1472602
 
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05:54 PM, October 07, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 06:06 PM, October 07, 2017
Bangladesh's mega refugee camp plan 'dangerous': UN official
rohingya_crisis_10.jpg

The arrival of more than half a million Rohingya refugees who have fled an army crackdown in Myanmar's Rakhine state since August 25 has put an immense strain on already packed camps in Bangladesh. File photo
AFP, Cox’s Bazar
A top UN official today said Bangladesh's plan to build the world's biggest refugee camp for 800,000-plus Rohingya Muslims was dangerous because overcrowding could heighten the risks of deadly diseases spreading quickly.
The arrival of more than half a million Rohingya refugees who have fled an army crackdown in Myanmar's troubled Rakhine state since August 25 has put an immense strain on already packed camps in Bangladesh.

Hard-pressed Bangladesh authorities plan to expand a refugee camp at Kutupalong near the border town of Cox's Bazar to accommodate all the Rohingya.

But Robert Watkins, the UN resident coordinator in Dhaka, told AFP the country should instead look for new sites to build more camps.

"When you concentrate too many people into a very small area, particularly the people who are very vulnerable to diseases, it is dangerous," Watkins told AFP.

"There are stronger possibilities, if there are any infectious diseases that spread, that will spread very quickly," he said, also highlighting fire risks in the camps.

"It is much easier to manage people, manage the health situation and security situation if there are a number of different camps rather than one concentrated camp."

At the request of the Bangladesh government, the UN's International Organization for Migration (IOM) has agreed to coordinate the work of aid agencies and help build shelters at the new camp site.

According to the IOM, the proposed camp will be the world's largest, dwarfing Bidi Bidi in Uganda and Dadaab in Kenya -- both housing around 300,000 refugees.

Three thousand acres (1,200 hectares) of land next to the existing Kutupalong camp have been set aside for the new Rohingya arrivals.

"700,000 is a big camp... we and our partners will have our work cut out for us", Joel Millman, an IOM spokesman, told reporters in Geneva on Friday.

But he added that UN agencies "wouldn't be undertaking this if we didn't think it was feasible".

Bangladeshi officials say the new camp will help them better manage relief operations and ensure the safety of the Rohingya amid fears that dispersed camps could become recruiting grounds for militants.

This week Bangladesh reported 4,000-5,000 Rohingya were crossing the border daily, with 10,000 more waiting at the frontier.

Watkins said the continuing influx represented "a very big challenge" for aid agencies.

"Just when we start to think we are getting on top of the situation, the numbers go up. We are not where we need to be right now," he said.
"There is still a lot more needed to be done."
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all
 
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I have no idea what you are talking about.
Fact is half a million Rohingya have fled into
BD with accusations of mass murder and rape.
If Myanmar has nothing to hide, then why not allow the world media in?

PS - you are on my ignore list now as you are worse than Hindu turds.
Ignoring these vermin is the best response.There are several vermin here mostly Indian and Pakistani.These vermin harbor deep racial,ethnic or religious prejudice against Bangladeshi people and are jealous that we are not conforming to their stereotype. I have stopped engaging with these scumbags.Now I mostly focus on posting important news and engaging with Bangladeshi and open minded foreigners. Let these vermin spread their vitriol as much as they can,we will keep moving with our normal paces.If they spread too much sh!t,just report their post.
 
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Ignoring these vermin is the best response.There are several vermin here mostly Indian and Pakistani.These vermin harbor deep racial,ethnic or religious prejudice against Bangladeshi people and are jealous that we are not conforming to their stereotype. I have stopped engaging with these scumbags.Now I mostly focus on posting important news and engaging with Bangladeshi and open minded foreigners. Let these vermin spread their vitriol as much as they can,we will keep moving with our normal paces.If they spread too much sh!t,just report their post.

Can you believe this one got made a "Think Tank"?
 
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Can you believe this one got made a "Think Tank"?
If you had the misfortune to come across some of the post of this so called 'think tank' then would have seen, he is obsessed with some imaginary racial superiority of Pakistani people and consider people with darker skin then him are worthy of extinction.
 
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Is that why I place @Joe Shearer above all others in this forum - He is decidely Bengali. And I strongly warn that a Zionist conspiracy is afoot. You need to watch out for them. Don't become pawns in a global chess game. You have too much to loose. Instead focus on sewing those shirts. I always buy Bangla made shirts. The best !
 
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Bangladesh Institute of Peace & Security Studies - BIPSS
A commentary titled
"Rohingya Refugee Crisis in Bangladesh: Its Multi-Dimensional Implications"
authored by President BIPSS, Maj Gen ANM Muniruzzaman (Retd) has been published by S.Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) in Singapore.
The RSIS Commentary analyses the implications of the current #Rohingya Refugee Crisis in Bangladesh.To read please visit BIPSS webpage https://bipss.org.bd or click here https://buff.ly/2xoBTQe.
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