The Borneo Post

Bangladesh eases charity access to Rohingya

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DHAKA: Bangladesh has eased restrictio­ns on aid groups working in refugee camps and sought US$ 250 million from the World Bank to fund emergency relief, officials said, after an influx of more than 435,000 Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar has overwhelme­d its border area.

The government NGO Affairs Bureau cleared 30 local and internatio­nal groups to meet ‘emergency needs’ in camps and said more would follow, Shahdat Hossain, a bureau director, told AFP.

Bangladesh has strictly limited access to Rohingya camps in recent years. It has never given reasons, but the country is sensitive about security and there are fears a Muslim influx could tempt extremist groups.

However, a new deluge of refugees since Aug 25 has put pressure on the existing camps, which were already home to 300,000 Rohingya Muslims who had fled earlier unrest in Buddhist- dominated Myanmar.

The camps are currently facing dire shortages of food and medicine, while the World Health Organisati­on warned of a growing risk of cholera.

The aid groups still only have permission to work for two months in the camps around the border town of Cox’s Bazar, Hossain said, and must focus on providing healthcare, sanitation facilities and shelters for the Rohingya.

The new groups include local and internatio­nal charities. Authoritie­s previously only let four internatio­nal groups – including Doctors With Border ( MSF) and Action Against Hunger (ACF) – provide food and healthcare.

Muslim Aid, a British- based charity given permission to operate in Cox’s Bazar last week but whose access was later revoked, remains barred. It operates in other parts of Bangladesh.

Authoritie­s briefly ordered MSF, ACF and Muslim Aid to stop providing aid to the Rohingya in 2012.

Dhaka-based BRAC, one of the world’s largest charities, is among the new groups allowed into the camps.

BRAC senior director Asif Saleh said in a Facebook post that the scale of the ‘humanitari­an crisis’ is significan­tly worse than what is being portrayed by the media.

He said the group has taken on the ‘herculean task’ of setting up 15,000 toilets, 1,100 tube wells, 50 health camps, 10 delivery centres and 50 child centres.

Bangladesh has deployed dozens of emergency medical teams and sent reinforcem­ents to hospitals in Cox’s Bazar.

They have treated more than 2,350 Rohingya for serious injuries sustained in the crackdown, including bullet and machete wounds and land mine injuries.

Some 80,000 Rohingya children have also been vaccinated for measles, rubella and polio diseases and thousands of adults treated for diarrhoea, respirator­y diseases and pregnancy complicati­ons.

Desperatel­y needing more help, junior health minister Zahid Malek said Dhaka has sought US$ 250 million from the World Bank to provide healthcare to the Rohingya.

The World Bank is considerin­g the request, a ministry statement added.

A United Nations official last week said it would need US$ 200 million over the next six months to handle the Rohingya crisis.

The UN made an emergency appeal for US$ 78 million on Sept 9, but UN resident coordinato­r in Bangladesh, Robert Watkins, said much more would be needed as the exodus grows. — AFP

 ??  ?? A general view of the newly-expanded camp housing refugees from Myanmar known as Kutupalong Extension in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district. — AFP photo
A general view of the newly-expanded camp housing refugees from Myanmar known as Kutupalong Extension in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district. — AFP photo

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