Khaleej Times

Broken bones, bullet wounds and horrific stories of death

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COX’S BAZAR — With Rohingya refugees still streaming across the swampy border into Bangladesh, one hospital was struggling on Monday to treat dozens of men who had arrived with broken bones, bullet wounds and horrific stories of death.

Already, some 93,000 Rohingya Muslims have entered Bangladesh in fleeing violence in western Myanmar, which erupted Aug. 25. The refugees have filled three existing refugee camps set up in the 1990s, aid workers say. Thousands more were sheltering wherever they could find space.

“We have heard reports of people cordoned off in the area” near the border, said UNHCR spokeswoma­n Vivian Tan. “We have also heard reports that at some border points, controls have been relaxed.”

UNHCR field agents had yet to gain access to border areas to fully assess the situation, but aid workers said many refugees needed medical attention for respirator­y diseases, infections and malnutriti­on.

On Monday, a clutch of refugees carrying nothing but bed sheets and personal documents in plastic bags were squatting in the open behind the Cox’s Bazar Sadar Hospital, about two hours from the nearest border point.

Inside, the hospital said it had treated 31 men who arrived “distressed and afraid” with broken bones and bullet wounds, mostly to their limbs, according to the resident medical officer Dr Shaheen Abdur Rahman Choudhury. They all told similar stories of Myanmar soldiers opening fire randomly on their villages in western Myanmar on August 2627, Choudhury said.

“They were fired upon; their homes were set on fire; they were forced to run. These are the common descriptio­ns they give us,” Choudhury said.

The hospital, already “hugely overburden­ed,” was expecting to receive many more wounded refugees,” he said. “What we are seeing is the tip of the iceberg.” —

 ??  ?? Amanullah, 28, and Mohammed Osama, 16, show their bullet wounds outside Sadar hospital, in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, on Monday. —
Amanullah, 28, and Mohammed Osama, 16, show their bullet wounds outside Sadar hospital, in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, on Monday. —

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