The Borneo Post

UN plans food aid for up to 700,000 Rohingya refugees

-

COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh: The UN has drawn up a contingenc­y plan to feed up to 700,000 Muslim Rohingya refugees from Myanmar after some 480,000 fled to Bangladesh over the past month and arrivals continue.

A senior official from the UN’s World Food Programme ( WFP) told AFP they were now prepared to provide massive food and other emergency aid if the influx continues in coming weeks.

“All the UN agencies together have now set a plan for a new influx of 700,000. We can cover if the new influx reaches 700,000,” said the WFP’s deputy chief in Bangladesh, Dipayan Bhattachar­yya, yesterday.

Rohingya have been fleeing Rakhine state in northeast Myanmar for decades. The new influx began on Aug 25 when deadly attacks by Rohingya militants on Myanmar police posts prompted a huge crackdown by the military. Bhattachar­yya said the hunger situation in camps has improved as food aid from WFP and other agencies is now reaching the refugees.

He said the plan also covers some 300,000 Rohingya who were already sheltering in southeast Bangladesh before the latest influx began — meaning it could cater for a million people in total.

“No one would be left out from any humanitari­an assistance,” he said, adding that the WFP would need about US$ 80 million for the massive aid.

UN High Commission­er for Refugees Filippo Grandi visited the overflowin­g camps last week

All the UN agencies together have now set a plan for a new influx of 700,000. We can cover if the new influx reaches 700,000.

and said Bangladesh needs ‘massive internatio­nal assistance’ to feed and shelter the Rohingya.

Grandi said there had been an ‘incredible outpouring of local generosity’ but that now needed to be ‘ beefed up by massive internatio­nal assistance, financial and material’.

A United Nations official last week said it would need $ 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.

Impoverish­ed Bangladesh, which earned praise for opening up its border, has eased restrictio­ns on aid groups working in refugee camps and sought US$ 250 million from the World Bank to fund emergency relief. — AFP

Dipayan Bhattachar­yya, deputy chief of UN World Food Programme in Bangladesh

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A Bangladesh­i soldier stands guard near the Balukhali refugee camp near Gumdhum village in Ukhia. — AFP photo
A Bangladesh­i soldier stands guard near the Balukhali refugee camp near Gumdhum village in Ukhia. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia