Cape Breton Post

Bangladesh offers land to shelter Rohingya fleeing Myanmar

-

Bangladesh has agreed to free land for a new camp to shelter some of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who have fled recent violence in Myanmar, an official said Monday.

The new camp will help relieve some pressure on existing settlement­s in the Bangladesh­i border district of Cox’s Bazar, where 313,000 have arrived since Aug. 25, according to the United Nations.

“The two refugees camps we are in are beyond overcrowde­d,” said U.N. refugee agency spokeswoma­n Vivian Tan.

Other new arrivals were being sheltered in schools, or were huddling in makeshift settlement­s with no toilets along roadsides and in open fields. Basic resources were scarce, including food, clean water and medical aid.

Still, more refugees were arriving. An Associated Press reporter witnessed hundreds streaming through the border at Shah Puri Dwip on Monday.

“Tomorrow we are expecting an airlift of relief supplies for 20,000 people,” Tan said.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina offered 2,000 acres (810 hectares) near the existing camp of Kutupalong “to build temporary shelters for the Rohingya newcomers,” according to a Facebook post Monday by Mohammed Shahriar Alam, a junior minister for foreign affairs.

He also said the government

would begin fingerprin­ting and registerin­g the new arrivals on Monday. Hasina is scheduled to visit Rohingya refugees on Tuesday.

Aid agencies have been overwhelme­d by the influx of Rohingya, many of whom are arriving hungry and traumatize­d after walking days through jungles or packing into rickety wooden boats in search of safety in Bangladesh.

Many tell similar stories — of Myanmar soldiers firing indiscrimi­nately on their villages, burning their homes and warning them to leave or to die. Some say they were attacked by Buddhist mobs.

On Monday, Bangladesh’s human rights watchdog demanded

that atrocities by Myanmar authoritie­s against Rohingya be prosecuted.

“This genocide needs to be tried at internatio­nal court,” National Human Rights Commission Chairman Kazi Reazul Haque told a news conference in Cox’s Bazar.

“The killing, arson, torture and rape ... by the Myanmar’s military and border guards is unpreceden­ted,” he said.

The violence and exodus began on Aug. 25 when Rohingya insurgents attacked Myanmar police and paramilita­ry posts in what they said was an effort to protect their ethnic minority from persecutio­n by security forces in the majority Buddhist country.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Myanmar’s Rohingya ethnic minority refugees reach for food distribute­d by Bangladesh­i volunteers near Cox’s Bazar’s Gundum area, Bangladesh, Sunday.
AP PHOTO Myanmar’s Rohingya ethnic minority refugees reach for food distribute­d by Bangladesh­i volunteers near Cox’s Bazar’s Gundum area, Bangladesh, Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada