Arab News

More misery for the Rohingya

- AZEEM IBRAHIM

What aid workers on the ground in Cox’s Bazar had long dreaded has finally come to pass — the first positive tests for COVID-19. At least one of the cases was an indigenous Bangladesh­i, and at least one other was a Rohingya refugee.

It is unclear whether these people were identified and tested before they had the chance to pass the virus on to those around them, or whether the virus is now silently incubating and transmitti­ng asymptomat­ically through the population in and around the camps. If the latter, there is little hope of stopping it now. Cox’s Bazar is the most densely populated refugee camp in the world, and the limited and shared water and sanitary facilities means that isolating anyone is a real physical challenge. If the former, it is only a matter of time before the virus arrives from a different source.

The consequenc­es of the arrival of the virus in the camps will inevitably be desperate. There are exactly zero intensive care beds available, and little hope of Bangladesh being able to provide any. There are an estimated

2,000 ventilator­s in all of Bangladesh, serving a population of 160 million people. The infection is spreading through the rest of the country, so those ventilator­s will be needed by Bangladesh­i citizens.

Keeping the virus out of the camps woud be a Sisyphean task even if we were lucky enough to contain the first occurrence­s. Once the virus gets in, it will rip through the population — there is probably nowhere in the world with a population living in conditions so perfect for viral transmissi­on. And once people start getting sick, those who are sick enough to need medical attention will probably die.

The mortality rates in Italy and Spain neared 10 percent because medical facilities were overwhelme­d, so the mortality rate in Cox’s Bazar can easily reach the maximum hospital admission level expected by medical experts, at up to 25 percent. And since we would expect nearly all the refugee population to get the virus once it starts spreading, in a population of 1 million people we are looking at over 100,000 deaths.

To make matters worse, even the survivors may serve as a reservoir for the virus for at least some time, meaning that the surroundin­g population, and indeed even the government of Bangladesh who so far have been very generous in hosting the refugees, may turn more hostile and seek to further isolate the group.

Thus, if left to develop on its own, this will easily become an even more gruesome humanitari­an disaster than the genocidal ethnic cleansing the Rohingya have already suffered at the hands of the Myanmar army in the lands of their birth. This situation is beyond the capacity of the government of Bangladesh to handle; the internatio­nal community, through the normal UN agencies, must step in and assume responsibi­lity and command. We know what happens next if they do not, and it will be our responsibi­lity and shame if we allow it to come to pass.

Dr. Azeem Ibrahim is a Director at the Center for Global Policy and author of “The Rohingyas: Inside Myanmar’s Genocide” (Hurst, 2017).

Twitter: @AzeemIbrah­im

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia