What's new

Yearning for relief: Rohingya Refugees.

Iran plans to provide Rohingya Muslims with warm food
2604119.jpg

By Tehran Times
October 15, 2017
TEHRAN – Iran plans to supply warm food to Rohingya Muslims living in displacement camps in Bangladesh.
The Iranian deputy health minister Mohammad Reza Ayyazi, heading a delegation, paid a visit to a refugee zone near Cox’s Bazar close to Myanmar border in Bangladesh on Friday.
“Now a group of sikhs from Punjab supplies some 5,000 dishes of warm food to the region on the daily basis,” he said, adding, Iran has the capacity and potential to provide the Rohingya refugees with much more meals.

Iranian benefactors can provide funds for supplying warm food and preparing cooking facilities in Bangladesh, he proposed.

“In this line, the expenses for consignment of relief through airway is decreased as well and Myanmar Muslims enjoy food with their favorite taste,” he said.
“During our visit to the refugee camps, we decided to organize Iranian aid for Rohingya Muslims,” Tasnim quoted him as saying.

The Iranian Red Crescent Society chief Ali Asghar Peyvandi and Iran’s Ambassador to Dhaka Abbas Vaezi accompanied Ayyazi during his visit.

The arrival of Rohingya Muslims from Buddhist-dominated Myanmar since August 25 has put an immense strain on camps in Bangladesh where there are growing fears of a disease epidemic.
Bangladesh health minister hails Iranian aids
The Bangladeshi Minister for Health and Family Welfare Mohammed Nasim has expressed his thanks over the dispatching of aid consignments by Iranians for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.
Nasim net with the Iranian Red Crescent Society chief Ali Asghar Peyvandi in Dhaka on Thursday.
During the visit, Nasim said that the displaced people of Myanmar in Bangladesh need physical and mental supports.

Several volunteer physicians are offering free medical services to refugees in the region, he explained.
On Thursday, Iran sent its third humanitarian aid shipment for Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh.
The 30 tons of relief supplies included humanitarian aid and food supplies.
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/10/iran-plans-to-provide-rohingya-muslims.html
 
.
12:00 AM, October 18, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:52 AM, October 18, 2017
Urgent need for fund, aid
UN seeks world response to meet Rohingyas' life-saving needs; new satellite images show 288 Rakhine villages destroyed
rohingya_influx_again.jpg

A sick Rohingya refugee woman is carried by two men after crossing the Naf River near the no man's land on the Bangladesh side of the border with Myanmar. Border guards told them they were not allowed to leave the area and reach the refugee camps near Ukhia of Cox's Bazar yesterday. Over half a million Rohingya refugees have fled Myanmar for Bangladesh since late August, the UN said, warning that thousands more were still stranded at the border. Photo: AFP
Diplomatic Correspondent

Amid fresh waves of Rohingya influx, the UN has urged the international community to come together to support the October 23 pledging conference to meet the life-saving needs of the displaced Myanmar nationals and to promote their safe return home.

Three UN-led aid bodies have appealed for $434 million over six months (Sept 2017 to Feb 2018) to help up to 1.2 million people, including some 400,000 Rohingyas already in Bangladesh before the latest crisis began in late August.

But to date, available funding and uncommitted pledges amount to roughly $100 million, according to a document of the pledging conference.

Two neighbouring countries -- India and China who are among Myanmar's closest allies -- are not in the list of financial contribution.

Diplomatic sources in Dhaka told The Daily Star yesterday the UN needed to prepare a “massive” funding request to manage the Rohingya refugees sheltered in Bangladesh as the number was rising every day and there was no sign of any repatriation in near future.

The UN yesterday reported that an estimated 582,000 refugees have arrived in Bangladesh since violence erupted in Myanmar's northern Rakhine state on August 25.

Meanwhile, the UN refugee agency yesterday called on Bangladesh to speed up vetting of up to 15,000 Rohingya refugees “stranded” near the border after crossing into the country from Myanmar and move them further inland to safer and better conditions, reports Reuters.

Reports of the fresh influx comes as latest satellite images of the HRW show at least 288 villages have been partially or fully destroyed by fire in Rakhine since August 25. At least 66 villages were burned after September 5, when security force operations supposedly ended.

The pledging conference would be held in Geneva on Monday to “send a strong message to Rohingya refugees and their generous hosts in Bangladesh that the world is there for them in their greatest time of need,” said a statement by the heads of three UN aid bodies -- UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Filippo Grandi, Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator (OCHA) Mark Lowcock and Director-General of the International Organisation for Migration (OIM) William Lacy Swing.

The ministerial-level pledging conference will be co-hosted by the European Union and the government of Kuwait, and co-organised by the UNHCR, IOM and OCHA.

The four objectives of the conference is to mobilise urgent resources to provide life-saving humanitarian aid; demonstrate solidarity with Bangladesh; promote all international and humanitarian laws for the refugees; and to promote safe, voluntary and sustainable return of the refugees to the place of origin, the statement said.

“We call on the international community to intensify efforts to bring a peaceful solution to the plight of the Rohingya, to end the desperate exodus, to support host communities and ensure the conditions that will allow for refugees' eventual voluntary return in safety and dignity,” it added.

The speed and the scale of the influx made it "the world's fastest growing refugee crisis and a major humanitarian emergency," the joint statement noted. “The origins and, thus, the solutions to this crisis lie in Myanmar.”

According to UN and government officials, the flow is the largest refugee movement in the region in decades and brings the total number of Rohingya living in Cox's Bazar to over one million with the numbers still growing.

“We have been moved by the welcome and generosity shown by the local communities towards the refugees,” the joint statement said, while noting their respective agencies have been working in overdrive with the Bangladesh government, local charities, volunteers and nongovernment organisations to provide assistance.

"The efforts must be scaled up and expanded to receive and protect refugees and ensure they are provided with basic shelter and acceptable living conditions," the statement said adding, “Every day more vulnerable people arrive with very little, if anything, and settle either in overcrowded existing camps or extremely congested makeshift sites."

'EVERY MINUTE COUNTS'
The UN refugee agency is concerned about the humanitarian condition of thousands of new arrivals who are stranded near the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.

UNHCR Spokesperson Andrej Mahecic yesterday told reporters in Geneva that an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 Rohingya refugees have entered Bangladesh through the Anjuman Para border crossing point in Ukhia since Sunday night.

As of yesterday morning, they were still squatting in the paddy fields of Anjuman Para village in Bangladesh.

They are waiting for permission from Bangladesh authorities to move away from the border, where the sound of gunfire continues to be heard every night from the Myanmar side.

The UNHCR has urged the Bangladesh authorities to urgently admit these refugees fleeing violence and increasingly-difficult conditions back home.

“Every minute counts given the fragile condition they're arriving in,” Reuters quoted the spokesperson as saying.

The delay was due to screening by Bangladesh border guards, he said, emphasising this was the right of any government.

He said the UNHCR and its partners, Bangladesh Red Crescent and Action against Hunger, are delivering food and water to the stranded refugees, among them children, women and the elderly who are dehydrated and hungry from the long journey.

“Many say they had initially chosen to remain in their homes in Myanmar's northern Rakhine state despite repeated threats to leave or be killed. They finally fled when their villages were set on fire,” Andrej Mahecic said.

MASS DESTRUCTION
Releasing the latest satellite images, the Human Rights Watch yesterday said its analysis indicated that the burnings focused on Rohingya villages and many of those took place after Burmese officials claimed that their “clearance operations” had ceased.

The imagery pinpoints multiple areas where destroyed Rohingya villages sat adjacent to intact ethnic Rakhine villages.

“These latest satellite images show why over half a million Rohingya fled to Bangladesh in just four weeks,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director.

“The Burmese military destroyed hundreds of Rohingya villages while committing killings, rapes, and other crimes against humanity that forced Rohingya to flee for their lives.”

A total of 866 villages in Maungdaw, Rathedaung and Buthidaung in Rakhine were monitored and analysed by the HRW.

Most of the damage occurred in Maungdaw Township, accounting for about 90 percent of the areas where destruction happened between August 25 and September 25.

Comparing recent imagery with those taken prior to the date of the attacks, analysis showed that most of the damaged villages were 90 to 100 percent destroyed.

Many villages which had both Rohingya and Rakhine residing in segregated communities, such as Inn Din and Ywet Hnyo Taung, suffered heavy arson damage from arson attacks, with known Rohingya areas burned to the ground while known Rakhine areas
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/mayanmar-rohingya-refugee-crisis-urgent-need-fund-aid-1477909
 
.
Yeni Şafak·
Nearly 340,000 Rohingya children are living in squalid conditions in Bangladesh camps where they lack enough food, clean water and health care, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said on Friday.
Up to 12,000 more children join them every week, fleeing violence or hunger in Myanmar, often still traumatised by atrocities they witnessed, it said in a report "Outcast and Desperate".
In all, almost 600,000 Rohingya refugees have left northern Rakhine state since Aug. 25 when the U.N. says the Myanmar army began a campaign of "ethnic cleansing".

http://www.yenisafak.com/…/rohingya-refugee-children-in-ban…
 
.
12:00 AM, October 21, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 06:16 AM, October 21, 2017
Step up support
Rights body urges longer-term assistance amid Rohingya crisis, UN advisers call upon Myanmar to stop atrocities
rohingya_camp_5.jpg

Rohingya refugees queue in the rain to receive food at Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox's Bazar yesterday. Photo: Reuters
Staff Correspondent
More countries need to step up and pledge their support for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh amid an unprecedented humanitarian crisis, Amnesty International said yesterday.
The rights group also said donors should think longer term when it comes to Rohingya refugees.

The meeting of high-level representatives of donor countries at the UN office in Geneva on Monday must include pledges of new money, including from countries in the region, to support rising numbers of Rohingyas who have sought shelter in Cox's Bazar.

“This is an unprecedented crisis that needs an immediate and sustained response from the international community. This means that more countries, particularly those from the region, need to play a much bigger role and share the burden of responsibility, said Omar Waraich, deputy South Asia director at Amnesty International.

“Bangladesh, a poor country which has shown extraordinary generosity, cannot be left to deal with this situation alone,” added the official.

“These deeply traumatised refugees are subsisting in extremely difficult conditions, with no prospect of being able to return home any time soon. The international community must mount a response that addresses both their immediate and long-term needs.”

Amnesty also said the Bangladeshi authorities and humanitarian groups are in a desperate scramble to scale up their operations.

They must be helped not just over the next few months, but for as long as it remains unsafe for people to return home voluntarily and with safety and dignity.

“Donors should think longer term when it comes to Rohingya refugees. The scale of this humanitarian crisis is such that the international community is continuously failing to anticipate the response needed,” said Charmain Mohamed, Amnesty International's Head of Refugee and Migrant Rights.

Meanwhile, two UN advisers called on the government of Myanmar to take immediate action to stop and address the commission of atrocity crimes that are reportedly taking place in northern Rakhine State.

They are Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide Adama Dieng and Special Adviser of the Responsibility to Protect Ivan Simonovic.

The two have been following the situation in Rakhine for several years and have warned that there was a risk that atrocity crimes could be committed there, says a statement issued on Thursday.

Risk factors they identified included very deeply rooted and long-standing discriminatory practices and policies against the Rohingyas.

“Despite warnings issued by us and by many other officials, the government of Myanmar has failed to meet its obligations under international law and primary responsibility to protect the Rohingya population from atrocity crimes. The international community has equally failed its responsibilities in this regard”, they stated.

There are clear needs for comprehensive psychosocial assistance or support programmes for a deeply traumatised population, who will need help over the short, medium and long term if their full physical, mental and emotional recovery is to be assured.
HARROWING JOURNEYS
The international community should address a range of urgent needs of Rohingya refugees, from transportation to camps, to medical and life-saving assistance at every stage, said Amnesty.

Refugees interviewed by Amnesty recalled harrowing journeys from their villages, where they came under attack, to the camps in Bangladesh.

Many said they had been forced to pay extortionate sums to be transported in boats to Bangladesh. Those without money told Amnesty that they were forced to part with jewellery and other valuable possessions to pay for the boat crossing.

“Rohingya refugees who walked for days -- often barefoot, hungry and injured, depleting all reserves -- are faced with extortion to make the last leg of their journey,” said Charmain Mohamed.

Given the failure of accountability in Myanmar when it comes to human rights violations against the Rohingya, including crimes against humanity, many refugees told Amnesty of their fear of returning to Myanmar unless conditions allow them to do so safely and with dignity.

Beyond the immediate needs, the international community must help Bangladesh cope with the humanitarian crisis going forward. This includes calling for accountability for crimes against humanity and the dismantlement of the entrenched system of discrimination that the Rohingya have long endured in Myanmar.
http://www.thedailystar.net/backpage/mayanmar-rohingya-refugee-crisis-step-support-1479583
 
. .
12:00 AM, October 23, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:38 AM, October 23, 2017
Refugee Crisis: WB mission assessing need for aid
rohingya_refugee_4.jpg

Rohingya refugees wait for a boat after crossing into Bangladesh from Myanmar at Shah Porir Dwip island in Teknaf yesterday. Photo: AFP
Rejaul Karim Byron
A World Bank team is doing a need assessment to help Dhaka deal with the Rohingya crisis that is already putting a tremendous pressure on Bangladesh.
A six-member mission led by Sanjay Srivastava, programme leader of WB's Sustainable Development, and Tekabe Belay, programme leader of its Human Development, has arrived in Dhaka on Saturday on a 14-day visit to do the evaluation.

The team went to Cox's Bazar, where some 1 million Rohingya people are sheltered, on a four-day visit yesterday.

After returning to Dhaka, the team will sit with officials from relief and disaster management, education, home and health ministries as well as local government engineering department.

Among others, they will hold talks with Abul Kalam Azad, principal coordinator for SDGs at the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), and Kazi Shofiqul Azam, secretary of the Economic Relations Division.

On the basis of the discussions, the WB will prepare a draft aid memoire, an official of the finance ministry said.

If the negotiations are fruitful, Bangladesh will receive around $300 million from the newly created WB refugee window fund, which allocated $600 million for the South Asia region, the official added.

After Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's approval on October 15, Bangladesh formally sought assistance from the WB to handle the refugee crisis.

Finance Minister AMA Muhith has already said the crisis would put a huge pressure on the budgetary measures.

A WB document, which outlines the criteria to be eligible for the assistance, does not say Bangladesh has to formally declare the Rohingya as refugees.

However, Dhaka has to meet three major criteria to get the fund.

“A country would be eligible if the number of UNHCR-registered refugees, including persons in refugee-like situations, it hosts is at least 25,000 or it is at least 0.1 percent of the country's population,” according the document.

In addition, it would need to have in place an action plan, strategy or similar document that describes concrete steps, including possible policy reforms that the country will undertake towards long-term solutions that benefit refugees and host communities, consistent with the overall purpose of the Bank's refugee window.

The decision of assistance will also be based on quantitative and qualitative analyses on the impact of refugee flows at the country or regional level.

For example, fiscal burden on host governments or potential for increased instability could be considered, the document read.

The fund would support projects that focus on the medium to longer term developmental needs of refugees and host communities, not humanitarian needs that are the mandate of other organisations.

Priority initiatives would include projects that promote refugees' welfare and inclusion in the host country's socio-economic structures.

The fund will also support legal solutions and policy reforms with regard to refugees, for example, freedom of their movement, formal labour force participation, identification documents and residency permits.

It will help ensure refugees' and host communities' access to quality services and basic infrastructure, support the host population whose livelihood is negatively affected by the refugees' presence, and support policy dialogue and activities to ensure refugees return to their country of origin.

Since violence broke out in Myanmar on August 25, at least 6,00,000 Rohingya people, according to the UN -- about 60 percent of them children -- have crossed into Bangladesh to join nearly 400,000 of their fellow countrymen who fled violence in Myanmar in phases over the years.

After a meeting with Muhith at the WB headquarters in Washington on October 12, the global lender in a statement said it was ready to move with a programme of support for Bangladesh government, host communities, and the Rohingya refugees.

After the meeting, the finance minister told reporters that Bangladesh was going to seek assistance formally from the Bank for about 10 lakh forcibly displaced Rohingyas.

“We have not specified any amount but have appealed for help and will get the maximum they can spare,” he said, adding that 50 percent of the amount would likely to be in grant.

Muhith said Bangladesh needed about $2 billion for the Rohingya refugees but only $600 million was allocated for the region from the fund.
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpa...sis-wb-mission-starts-assessing-needs-1480282
 
.
11:22 AM, October 23, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 11:34 AM, October 23, 2017
Condition of Rohingya refugees grim: Malaysian team
rohingya-malasia-ann-wb.jpg

Ready to go: Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak checks on the humanitarian mission for Rohingya before its flight from Sepang yesterday, October 22, 2017. Photo: The Star/ Asia News Network
The Star, Malaysia
Conditions at the Rohingya refugee camp at the Bangladesh-Myanmar border continue to be grim, said the Malaysian team helping out there.
There is no access to clean water, said 1Malaysia For Youth (iM4U) chief executive officer Rudy Malik who is leading a third mission to deliver 56.6 tonnes of humanitarian relief material.
READ more: Myanmar must take them back
The refugees also have no proper toilets, he said
“It is devastating because they lack the most basic necessities. To get water, they use tube wells but these can only be set up in certain areas.
Also READ: No real progress yet
But the refugees still have food, which is cooked in pots provided by aid organisations and in fire pits dug into the ground.

Yesterday, Prime Minister Najib Razak sent off the “My Caring Nation, Humanitarian Mission for Rohingya” from the cargo complex at the KL International Airport (KLIA).

The relief items, which include medicine, biscuits, sanitary pads, toothbrushes, towels, disposable diapers and blankets, was sent via an A330-300 Malaysia Airlines Bhd (MAS) cargo aircraft.

The distribution will be managed by 1M4U, which is representing the Prime Minister’s Office. It will be assisted by the Bangladesh government.

The team has received permission from Bangladesh to deliver the aid directly to the refugees.

The first humanitarian mission was on Sept 9 while the second was on Oct 7.

Newly-appointed MAS executive director and group chief executive officer Capt Izham Ismail said the national carrier is proud to participate in this mission spearheaded by the Prime Minister.

“This is the third flight we are embarking on. We hope the aid will ease the suffering of the Rohingya refugees,” he said. “We commit ourselves and support the mission in the spirit of Negaraku.”

Anyone who wants to help the initiative should use the iM4U Maybank account 5643-2460-5701, or send food and other essential items to any of the six collection centres in the country.

The centres, operating from noon to 10pm daily until Oct 30, are KLIA’s Landside Operation Office near the airport limousine waiting area; Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport’s old Terminal 2; Kota Kinabalu International Airport’s old Terminal 2; Penang International Airport’s Malaysia Airports training centre; Kuching International Airport’s MAB cargo complex; and Surau Al Mikraj at Kelantan’s Sultan Ismail Petra Airport.
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all
 
. .
OFID supports UNHCR relief operations in Bangladesh
20.10.2017
EA_NewsWebBangladesh.jpg

Photo: UNHCR
Vienna, Austria, October 20, 2017.
The OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID)
has approved an emergency assistance grant to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to help fund ongoing humanitarian operations in Bangladesh, where an estimated 20,000 Rohingyas per day are seeking refuge after outbreaks of violence in Rakhine State in Myanmar.

These outbreaks have triggered one of the most massive and swiftest refugee crises in the world today, with nearly one half million people fleeing to safety, primarily in Cox’s Bazar District in Bangladesh. There, they have joined 33,000 Rohingyas registered as refugees in the camps in Kutupalong and Nayapar, as well as over 274,000 others, mainly in so-called makeshift camps.

A large number of the refugees comprise women and children, many of whom have become separated from their families. UNHCR has declared this a refugee crisis and has launched an appeal, coordinating and working closely with the government of Bangladesh and agency partners to help meet refugees’ most basic needs, including supplementary feeding program, shelter, water, sanitation and healthcare, as well as camp and site preparation and management, among other activities.

OFID’s US$400,000 grant will help fund the top priorities as identified by the UNHCR; especially those concerning food security and nutrition; safe water supplies and sanitation facilities, as well as medical care and preventive health measures. Cooperation between OFID and UNHCR dates back to 1984. Since then, 13 grants have been extended in support of UNHCR’s relief operations in Asia and Africa.
http://www.ofid.org/NewsEvents/ArticleId/3393/OFID-supports-UNHCR-relief-operations-in-Bangladesh
 
.
12:00 AM, October 24, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:54 AM, October 24, 2017
$340m pledged to help Rohingya refugees: UN
Bangladesh ambassador to UN terms the influx untenable
rohingya-camp-reuters-wb.jpg

Experience shows that foreign interference in crises does not work and China supports the Myanmar government's efforts to protect stability, a senior Chinese official said on Saturday, amid ongoing violence in Myanmar's Rakhine state. Rohingya refugees line up at a registration center in Kutupalong refugees camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, October 20, 2017. Photo: Reuters
Agencies
The head of the UN agency that coordinates humanitarian aid says they have pledged roughly $340 million to help more than 6,00,000 Rohingyas who have fled Myanmar into Bangladesh since August.
Mark Lowcock of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said donors included governments and the European Union at a one-day conference in Geneva for the Rohingya. The UN and its partners are seeking $434 million to help the Rohingya through February.

Lowcock said more contributions are still expected.

Bangladesh faces an untenable situation because nearly 1 million Rohingya refugees, including the new arrivals, have fled across its border from violence in Myanmar and its government should let them return home, Bangladesh's UN envoy said the at the pledging conference.

“This is an untenable situation,” Shameem Ahsan, Bangladesh's ambassador to the UN in Geneva, told the UN pledging conference. “Despite claims to the contrary, violence in Rakhine state has not stopped. Thousands still enter on a daily basis.”

Vital humanitarian aid must continue, Ahsan said, adding: “It is of paramount importance that Myanmar delivers on its recent promises and work towards safe, dignified, voluntary return of its nationals back to their homes in Myanmar.”

Myanmar continued to issue “propaganda projecting Rohingyas as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh”, Ahsan said, adding: “This blatant denial of the ethnic identity of Rohingyas remains a stumbling block.”

Myanmar considers the Rohingya to be stateless, although they trace their presence in the country back generations.

Filippo Grandi, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, later told journalists that the two countries had begun talks on “repatriation”.

Any return must be “voluntary, safe and dignified” and conducive conditions have to be “recreated” in Rakhine, he said. “This must include a solution to the question of citizenship, or rather lack thereof for the Rohingya community,” Grandi said.

Khaled al-Jarallah, deputy foreign minister of Kuwait which co-hosted the meeting, called on Myanmar authorities to “cease the practice of stripping the Rohingya minority of their right of citizenship, which as a result deprives them of the right to property and employment”.

The UN appealed for the $434m fund to provide life-saving aid to 1.2 million people for six months.

“We need more money to keep pace with intensifying needs. This is not an isolated crisis, it is the latest round in a decades-long cycle of persecution, violence and displacement,” Mark Lowcock told the talks.

“Children, women and men fleeing Myanmar are streaming into Bangladesh traumatized and destitute,” he added.

New pledges included 30 million euros announced by the European Union, $15 million by Kuwait, 10 million Australian dollars by Australia and 12 million pounds from Britain.
POPE CONCERNED
Pope Francis yesterday mourned the plight of 200,000 Rohingya children stuck in refugee camps a month before he heads to Myanmar and Bangladesh.

"Two hundred thousand Rohingya children [are] in refugee camps. They have barely enough to eat, though they have a right to food. [They are] Malnourished, without medicine," he said.

The pope will visit Myanmar at the end of November before moving on to Bangladesh. During his visit, he will meet with Aung San Suu Kyi.

There are currently no plans for the Argentine pontiff to stop in strife-torn Rakhine State or the refugee camps in Bangladesh.
CANADIAN ENVOY FOR REFUGEE CRISIS
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed a special envoy to Myanmar yesterday tasked with pressing its leadership to resolve the Rohingya refugee crisis.

Trudeau also announced in a statement that Canada would be doubling its contribution this year of humanitarian aid for the refugees to $20 million.

Former senior MP Bob Rae will "reinforce the urgent need to resolve the humanitarian and security crisis in Myanmar and to address the situation affecting vulnerable populations, including the Rohingya Muslim community," read the statement, released as an international donor conference opened in Geneva.

Rae, who preceded Trudeau as leader of Canada's Liberal Party, will also advise him on how best to support "those affected and displaced by the recent violence."

Trudeau said he is "deeply concerned about the urgent humanitarian and security crisis in Myanmar's Rakhine State, particularly the brutal persecution of the Rohingya Muslim people."

At a press conference, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland called for the immediate end to "widespread attacks against the Rohingya."

"These are crimes against humanity and the responsibility for ending the ethnic cleansing falls squarely on Myanmar's military leadership and its civilian government," she said.

Canada, she added, is looking at possibly resettling some of the refugees.
Rae will travel to the region next week and make his findings public at the end of January.
[From AP, Reuters and AFP]
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/340m-pledged-help-rohingya-refugees-un-1480825
 
.
In Grim Camps, Rohingya Suffer on ‘Scale That We Couldn’t Imagine’
BEN C. SOLOMON
The New York Times
BALUKHALI, Bangladesh — Up to their ankles in mud, hundreds of Rohingya refugees fought to the front of the crowd outside of their makeshift camp.
An open-bed truck full of Bangladeshi volunteers was passing by, tossing out donated goods at random: small bags of rice, a faded SpongeBob SquarePants T-shirt, a cluster of dirty forks.

Entire families sloshed through the rain hoping to grab whatever they could. One boy, no older than 6, squeezed his way to an opening where a pair of oversize men’s jeans came hurtling off a truck. He had to fight off an older boy before he could run off with the prize.

There were already more than 200,000 ethnic Rohingya migrants stuck in camps like this one, Balukhali, in southern Bangladesh. But over the past month, at least 500,000 more — more than half of the Rohingya population thought to have been living in Myanmar — are reported to have fled over the border to take refuge, surpassing even the worst month of the Syrian war’s refugee tide.

As international leaders squabble over whether to punish Myanmar for the military’s methodical killing and uprooting of Rohingya civilians, the recent arrivals are living in abjectly desperate conditions.

This is not so much a defined camp as a dense collection of bamboo and tarp stacks. When I visited, children were wandering in the mud looking for food and clothes. There are worries about cholera and tuberculosis. With no toilets, what’s left of the forest has become a vast, improvised bathroom.
Continue reading the main story
While the flow of refugees has greatly slowed in the past week, aid organizations are still overwhelmed.

“It’s on a scale that we couldn’t imagine,” said Kate White, the Doctors Without Borders medical emergency manager in Bangladesh. “This is a small piece of land, and everyone is condensed into it. We just can’t scale up fast enough.”

For decades, the Muslim Rohingya of Myanmar, a minority concentrated in the western state of Rakhine, have faced systemic repression by the country’s Buddhist majority, and particularly by the military. But what happened in August, when the military and allied mobs began burning whole Rohingya villages, was so much worse that the United Nations is calling it ethnic cleansing.

Across the camps, the escaped all have accounts of fire and cruelty.

Anwar Begum, 73, sat on the ground, her arm limp below the elbow. She was in constant pain and could hardly focus her eyes. The army, she told me, set fire to her village in Myanmar and cleared the people out. As the civilians fled, one soldier singled her out, saying, “You’re not welcome in Myanmar,” and smashing her elbow with the butt of his rifle. As her family dragged her away, the soldier had one last thing to say: “Bring that to Bangladesh.”

What was once a loose network of camps has become a sprawl. Acres upon acres of forest have been razed to make way for small cities of huts, made from cheap black tarps covered in mud. Across the camp, men are building them as fast as they can.

With existing camps beyond capacity, the Bangladeshi government is racing to convert land into settlements for new arrivals.

Every medical treatment post here has a line that snakes nearly around the camp. Local doctors and foreign aid organizations like Doctors Without Borders are scrambling to set up more clinics but can hardly keep pace.

With just one main road connecting most of the district, aid groups are struggling to reach the most remote camps. In Taink Khali, a nearly 30-minute hike off the main road, an Australian aid agency called Disaster Response Group was setting up a mobile clinic in a tiny shack. Dozens of women and children were waiting quietly in the hot sun.

“We’re the first aid these people have seen,” said Brad Stewart, operations manager for the aid group, a small medical assistance organization that most often serves backpackers in Nepal. His team of four ex-military Australians were taping a bottle of hand sanitizer to a tree.

“The immediate attention is going to the more established camps,” he said. “Out here, we’re just a drop in a very large bucket.”

For the hundreds still coming, they face a dangerous boat ride across the river border into Bangladesh. On Thursday, dozens of Rohingya, many of them children, were killed as a trawler carrying them capsized in the Bay of Bengal.

Their bodies washed up on the bay alongside some survivors.

“The women and children couldn’t swim,” said Nuru Salam, 22. He had tried to cross with his entire family when the boat tipped in the sea. His son had died and he was waiting to find his wife’s body. “There are still many more bodies to come.”
Helping the Rohingya

A partial list of aid groups working to ease the humanitarian crisis in Myanmar and Bangladesh.

The physical challenges here are steep enough. But the Rohingya crisis has shaken the entire region, exacerbating already severe sectarian and political strains and worsening the relationship between Bangladesh and Myanmar, in particular.

This is not the first wave of Rohingya that Bangladesh has had to absorb. In 1978, around 200,000 Rohingya fled into the country. Most returned to Myanmar after the two governments hammered out a repatriation deal. Another influx came in the early 1990s, as well as in 2012 and in October of last year.

Even before this latest exodus from Myanmar, the stresses being placed on this already poor country were considerable. Yet some of the locals have shown remarkable kindness.
The Interpreter Newsletter
Understand the world with sharp insight and commentary on the major news stories of the week.

“I see that the host community here has been incredibly positive,” said Karim Elguindi, head of the World Food Program’s office in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. “I’m still surprised by the humanitarian response of the government and the community.”

Mr. Elguindi has worked in Darfur, the strife-torn region of western Sudan, and he noted that while the sheer concentration of arriving Rohingya was unprecedented and the terrain challenging for aid distribution, the Rohingya could at least count on basic security once they made it to Bangladesh.

“Compared with Darfur, here they speak the same language,” he said. “The refugees in Darfur were in I.D.P. camps,” referring to internally displaced persons. “They were still among enemies. Here, they are relatively safe.”

With existing camps beyond their capacity, the Bangladeshi government is racing to convert an additional 2,000 acres of land into settlements for the new arrivals. But a report from a network of United Nations agencies warned that Rohingya refugees had already arrived at the site before adequate infrastructure and services had been set up. The local authorities have begun limiting Rohingya refugees to the camps, setting up police checkpoints to prevent them from leaving.

The Rohingya crisis has exacerbated sectarian and political strains in the region.
On Sunday, a Bangladeshi cabinet minister said that the government did not plan to give refugee status to the newly arrived Rohingya — a stance that is complicating efforts to get them more aid. The Bangladeshi government has said it hopes that Myanmar will eventually take back the Rohingya.

The Myanmar government, however, has said that it will only repatriate those with the correct documentation to prove they are from Rakhine. It is unlikely that most of the Rohingya who recently fled to Bangladesh brought such papers with them, if they ever possessed them at all.

So far, the bulk of the aid effort has fallen to groups of Bangladeshi volunteers. Touched by the stories they have seen on local television, many across the nation have started donation campaigns and driven long distances to give what they can to struggling refugees.

“We couldn’t just sit at home,” said Abul Hossain, a volunteer who lives six hours north of the camps. “Last week we asked everyone in our village to donate. We drove all night to bring it here.”

Mr. Hossain and his neighbors had hoped to hand the goods over to government workers or foreign aid organizations like the United Nations, but they say they have not been able to find any.

“We’ve been driving around since the morning looking for anyone to take this,” he said. “So now, we’re just handing it out ourselves.”

This has proved a dangerous method. Last week, CNN reported that a woman and two children were killed in a stampede as a group of Bangladeshis threw food from a truck.

Since then, assistance has improved significantly. Food distribution points have been set up by the Bangladeshi government to try to lessen the need for the volunteer truck visits. But it is still a challenge.

“There are no roads. We’ve been carrying our equipment in the heavy rain,” said Ms. White, from Doctors Without Borders.

Near his truck at the entrance to the camp, Mr. Hossain unloaded some of his goods as the lines grew around him.

“We expect these people will return home one day. For now we will help them — they are our brothers and sisters.” Then his index finger went up. “But maybe not forever.”

Hannah Beech contributed reporting from Bangkok, and Jeffrey Gettleman from Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
Follow Ben C. Solomon on Twitter: @bcsolomon.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/29/...id=facebook&mccr=edit&ad-keywords=GlobalTruth
 
. .
Malnutrition Crisis Grips Rohingya Refugee Children
173C4976-39C4-4757-99EF-D7D7E04221CF_w1023_r1_s.jpg

A Rohingya Muslim woman, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, feeds her daughter inside the centre of Action contre La Faim (ACF) for malnutrition children near Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017.
By Lisa Schlein
Voice of America
October 28, 2017
GENEVA — The U.N. children’s fund warns potentially life-threatening malnutrition is soaring among Rohingya refugee children who have fled to Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh to escape violence and abuse in Myanmar.

The U.N. children’s fund does not know the extent of acute malnutrition among Rohingya child refugees. So, UNICEF spokeswoman Marixie Mercado says a nutrition survey is underway that will provide vital data when it is completed in November.

“What we already know is that the combination of malnutrition, sanitary conditions, and disease in the refugee settlements, is potentially catastrophic for children," said Mercado.

More than 600,000 Rohingya refugees have arrived in Cox’s Bazar since August 25 to escape violence and persecution in Myanmar’s Northern Rakhine State. Children comprise nearly 60 percent of the refugees.
740B12BF-92E9-404E-B521-5DC723B6D4CD_w650_r0_s.jpg

A Rohingya Muslim woman, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds her 10-month-old son inside her shelter in Thaingkhali refugee camp, Bangladesh, Saturday, Oct. 21, 2017.

Mercado says UNICEF screened several hundred children who were stuck at the border during the mass influx in mid-October. She says dozens of children were found to be severely acutely malnourished and in need of immediate life-saving treatment.
She says screening conducted by Doctors Without Borders found 14 cases of the worst form of malnutrition among 103 children.

“This is an extremely small number of children, so these numbers are not representative," said Mercado. "But, what they do tell us is that at least some of the children are close to death by the time they make it across the border.”

UNICEF spokeswoman Mercado says the spread of infectious diseases is also of concern. She notes measles cases have been reported among newly arrived children as well as those who have been living in Cox’s Bazar for some time.

She says the risk of diarrheal disease and dysentery is exceptionally high in the overcrowded, unsanitary conditions in which the children live.
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/10/malnutrition-crisis-grips-rohingya.html
 
. .
http://yenisafak.vod.ma.doracdn.com...17/10/28/d716b63a90a14a9880d96d23a3d1c67e.mp4
Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh face cooking fuel shortage
Haber Merkezi 14:46 October 28, 2017 Yeni Şafak
Aid and charity organizations have been working hard to keep Rohingya Muslims who fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh fed and clothed but those who live in the camps say they are facing another problem - a lack of cooking fuel.

Kerosene rations are far from enough for families to live on and the forest areas around the camps are barren as people have cut down trees and collected leaves to use as firewood. Money is scarce and some have resorted to selling food handouts to buy firewood.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom