The Phnom Penh Post

‘Everything is business’: Crisis offers economic opportunit­y

- Aidan Jones and Redwan Ahmed

CAPTAIN Min Min, a Buddhist from Myanmar, looks on as a stream of Muslim Rohingya labourers zig-zag up narrow gangplanks hauling sacks of ginger from his boat into Bangladesh – one of many seizing the economic opportunit­ies presented by a refugee crisis.

“I don’t worry about conflict ... everything is just business,” the ethnic Rakhine skipper says, offering whiskey, cigarettes and big betel nutstained smiles as he waits for his ninetonne cargo to be unloaded.

The Bangladesh­i district of Cox’s Bazar now hosts around one million Rohingya from Myanmar, the vast majority of whom fled their country a year ago, driven out by the army and mobs of ethnic Rakhine, who falsely brand the Muslim minority as “Bengali” intruders.

The makeshift Rohingya camps have now congealed into tent cities spread out across hills and farmland.

They contain new and dynamic economies, pump-primed by donor money and driven by a captive market of hundreds of thousands in need of food, shelter, work and – for those who can afford it – consumer goods.

For generation­s trade has diluted ethnic and religious rivalries among the Rakhine, Rohingya and Bangladesh­is who flit between the two countries.

Commerce was barely interrupte­d as scores of Rohingya villages were torched in August last year, sparking an exodus of around 700,000 people by land and sea into Bangladesh.

The skies were heavy with smoke, but Min Min says he carried on delivering his ‘Made in Myanmar’ cargo to Teknaf port – rice, ginger, make-up, noodles and the “ainshi” chestnuts ubiquitous at Rohingya snack stalls.

The refugee influx has been good for business, adds his friend Thoin Line, an ethnic Rakhine importer from the Bangladesh side of the border.

“The Rohingya are tough... they work night and day,” he says, adding, “and their wages are not too high.”

Below, a line of drenched, wiry workers emerge from the hull of the boat, each shoulderin­g two 30-kilogramme (66-pound) sacks of ginger imported from Myanmar.

They will earn between $3-6 a day for their back-breaking efforts – a decent wage of sorts for labourers officially barred from working in Bangladesh and thus compelled to pay a share of their earnings to camp leaders who cherry-pick the workforce.

Most refugees are either jobless or stuck at the bottom of the labour ladder, a place they have occupied since Myanmar first began expelling its Rohingya in 1978.

At the Kutupalong megacamp Bangladesh­i entreprene­ur Kamal Hussein, 24, is praying for rain.

His income comes from a row of nearly 50 mobile phone charging points secured by bamboo struts.

“Business is slow ... it is sunny and most people have solar panels so they don’t need our shop,” he says.

Business is better when it rains because then “the solar panels don’t work”, he adds.

Consumer goods like mobile phones are in hot demand as refugees settle in, spending salaries and remittance­s from relatives overseas.

Salesman Kaiser Ahmed says before last August’s crisis he sold five or six phones a week at the existing camps. “Now it is around 300,” he explains. Like many other Bangladesh­is, Kaiser’s income has surged in step with the crisis.

Stores to repair and pawn Rohingya jewellery, stalls selling gaudy saris and shops charging refugees 30 US cents to watch live English Premier League football matches on their TVs have sprung up around the camp fringes over the past year.

NGO influx

Furthermor­e, the non-profits which work in the camps are big buyers of local bamboo, tarpaulins, concrete, pots, pans and blankets and employ thousands of Bangladesh­i and Rohingya staff.

Bangladesh­i Mohammad Jashan, 26, whose home is just outside Kutupalong, says he has climbed up the value chain in each of the three jobs he has held in foreign organisati­ons in the last 12 months.

He now earns $300 a month for a British charity – several times higher than the national average.

“My next salary will be higher as I have more skills,” he says, beaming proudly.

But pinch points are emerging. Poorer Bangladesh­is say the Rohingya influx has collapsed wages.

Crime, drugs and prostituti­on are rising, while the foreign NGO influx has warped prices – making owners of apartments, cars, hotels and restaurant­s richer, but sharpening the poverty of the locals with nothing to offer them.

Even among the Rohingya resentment­s are emerging.

“After the new refugees came the NGOs put all the focus into them,” says Setara Begum, who was born in Kutupalong and is one of the roughly quarter million refugees to have lived in Bangladesh for years.

“We only get basic rations now,” the 18-year-old said.

Keeping the peace

In June the World Bank moved to head off angst between the Rohingya and their Bangladesh­i hosts, offering nearly half a billion dollars in grants for refugee health, education and sanitation.

The aim is to help ease Dhaka’s burden and establish services that will also be used – and staffed by – Bangladesh­is.

With refugees unlikely to be repatriate­d any time soon, cash and jobs are the best route to keeping the peace.

At a beach outside the Shamlapur camp, Rohingya fisherman Mohammad Hossain says he worked his way up over two decades from crew to become the co-owner of two of the distinctiv­e crescent-shaped boats that dot the coastline.

It is a dangerous job in the high monsoon seas.

But there is no shortage of willing crew so the number of boats braving the waves has increased along with the catch, as money is spun from desperatio­n.

“Bangladesh­is are scared of the sea. But Rohingya live on the coast ... we are used to the water,” he says.

“It’s risky but the Rohingya here can’t do anything else.”

 ?? ED JONES/AFP ?? Rohingya workers (left) transport 30kg sacks of ginger from a boat, which arrived from Myanmar’s Rakhine state, on August 13 at Teknaf port near Cox’s Bazar.
ED JONES/AFP Rohingya workers (left) transport 30kg sacks of ginger from a boat, which arrived from Myanmar’s Rakhine state, on August 13 at Teknaf port near Cox’s Bazar.

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