The Star Malaysia

Urgent need for supplies

Distributi­on points running out of stocks as number of refugees swells

- Crisis in Rakhine

Desperatio­n spreads in Rohingya camps as food stocks dwindle.

CoX’S BaZaR: With Rohingya refugees still flooding across the border from Myanmar, those packed into camps and makeshift settlement­s in Bangladesh are becoming desperate for scant basic resources and dwindling supplies.

Fights are erupting over food and water. Women and children are tapping on car windows or tugging at the clothes of passing reporters while rubbing their bellies and begging for food.

The UN said yesterday that an estimated 290,000 Rohingya Muslims have arrived in the border district of Cox’s Bazar in just the last two weeks, joining at least 100,000 who were already there after fleeing earlier riots or persecutio­n in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

The number was expected to swell further, with thousands crossing the border on foot each day.

“More and more people are coming,” said UNHCR spokesman Vivian Tan.

With camps already “more than full”, the new arrivals were setting up spontaneou­s settlement­s along roadsides or on any available patches of land.

Within the camps “we are trying our best, but it is very difficult because every day we are seeing new arrivals” with nowhere to go.

Many of the newly arrived were initially stunned and traumatise­d after fleeing violence that erupted on Aug 25 in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

They are now growing desperate in searching for food distributi­on points that appeared only in recent days, passing out packets of biscuits and 25kg bags of rice.

One aid worker, who asked not to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the media, said “stocks are running out” with the refugees’ needs far greater than what they had imagined.

“It is impossible to keep up,” she said.

At one food distributi­on point, women were volunteeri­ng to help keep order by tapping people with bamboo sticks to gently urge them back in line.

Weary women carried infants in their arms while clutching other children to their sides, afraid they might be separated in the crowds.

One 40-year-old man, faint with hunger, collapsed while waiting and could not stand again on his own strength when others tried to help him up.

They drizzled water between his lips in an attempt to revive him, to no avail.

“Everyone is hungry. Everyone has been waiting for hours,” said another aid worker, who also did not want to be identified by name.

He said the crowds were becoming unmanageab­le, and that aid agencies may need to ask for a police presence.

“We are not prepared here for such a huge number,” he said.

Refugee camps had already been filled to capacity.

Makeshift settlement­s were quickly appearing and expanding along roadsides, and the city of Cox’s Bazar – built to accommodat­e only 500,000 – was bursting at its seams.

There was an urgent need for more temporary shelters, Tan said.

“We are seeing the mushroomin­g of these very flimsy shelters that will not be able to house people for too long,” she said.

The UN has asked Bangladesh authoritie­s to make more land available, so they can build new relief camps.

An increasing number of Rohingya were also arriving by boats that crossed the monsoon-swollen Naf River or the rough waters in the Bay of Bengal.

Some 300 boats from Myanmar reached Cox’s Bazar on Wednesday alone, the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration said. — AP

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 ?? — Reuters/AFP ?? Fleeing violence: Rohingya refugees climbing up a hill after crossing the Bangladesh­Myanmar border in Cox’s Bazar while (below) other refugees gather at newly built shelters at the Kutupalong camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhiya district.
— Reuters/AFP Fleeing violence: Rohingya refugees climbing up a hill after crossing the Bangladesh­Myanmar border in Cox’s Bazar while (below) other refugees gather at newly built shelters at the Kutupalong camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhiya district.
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