The Citizen (KZN)

Refugees face cholera risk

- Cox’s Bazar

– The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) warned yesterday of a growing cholera risk in the refugee camps in Bangladesh where more than 435 000 Rohingya Muslims have sought shelter from Myanmar.

A month after the exodus began, those dispersed into some 68 camps and settlement­s along the border, do not have safe drinking water and hygiene facilities.

The camps also face dire shortages of food and medicine in what has quickly become one of the world’s largest such settlement­s.

“Risk of water-borne diseases is high, especially a very high risk of cholera and this is why everyone is concerned,” the WHO said in a statement.

“Interventi­ons are being scaled up. However, the situation remains critical and challengin­g.”

The latest influx has overwhelme­d the camps around Cox’s Bazar, which previously housed at least 300 000 people, who had fled earlier violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

The WHO says mobile medical centres have been set up, while Bangladesh health authoritie­s say they have treated some 4 500 Rohingya for diarrhoea in a month and vaccinated some 80 000 children for measles and polio.

“We are trying our best to face the challenges. But we are concerned,” said Enayet Hossain, deputy head of Bangladesh’s health services department.

The department said that at least 10 Rohingya have died in Bangladesh since the influx, most from bullet and blast wounds suffered in Rakhine.

Two elderly Rohingya men died of diarrhoea at a charity clinic more than a week ago, said Misbah Uddin Ahmed, a health department official at Ukhia, where most of the camps are located.

“They were also suffering from old age complicati­ons and gastroente­ritis,” he said.

Two Rohingya women, aged 50 and 60, were shifted to a hospital in the port city of Chittagong after they were diagnosed with HIV.

Ahmed said specialist­s from Bangladesh’s Internatio­nal Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research (ICDDRB) and government scientists had visited camps.

Meanwhile, the Doctors Without Borders (MSF) group has also warned that the camps were now on the brink of a public health disaster. – AFP

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