The Telegram (St. John's)

‘I couldn’t walk away’

Newfoundla­nder dedicated to Rohingya refugees

- BY BARB SWEET

Andrew Day was going to head home to Newfoundla­nd from Bangladesh later this month, but when police raided an unofficial refugee camp where he helped people, his travel plans changed abruptly.

The Rohingya refugee camp, near the Burmese border, had its bamboo huts destroyed the day after Day and others brought aid there about a week ago.

“I can’t leave it,” said the South River, Conception Bay North, resident. “After this mass eviction, I couldn’t walk away.”

Day had been in Bangladesh for more than a month, although he’s now in Singapore renewing his travel visa and will head back to the Cox’s Bazar area camps next week.

His drive to bring rice to the camps and help build schools began with fundraisin­g efforts back home in Newfoundla­nd for such things as animals and other basic refugee necessitie­s. Day had been working at a paint store at the time and said he spent his own money trying to help.

But a couple of years ago, when he hit a wall on fundraisin­g and was asked if he was ever in Bangladesh, he decided it was time to go see for himself.

Day said he’d developed a system of getting aid into the unofficial refugee camps — there are hundreds of thousands of refugees in various camps — while staying ahead of authoritie­s trying to stop the efforts.

The Rohingya Muslims became refugees when they fled a military crackdown on the minority group in Myanmar decades ago.

About 1.3 million Rohingyas are denied citizenshi­p under national law and are stateless, with few rights.

After Myanmar started a tran- sition from dictatorsh­ip to democracy in 2011, newfound freedom of expression fanned hatred against the Rohingyas by the Buddhist majority. Violence by mobs of Buddhists left up to 280 people dead — most of them members of the religious minority — and chased another 140,000 from their homes.

“I quickly began specializi­ng in ways to get aid to places where aid was blocked,” Day said of his early involvemen­t with the cause and connection­s he made with non-government­al organizati­ons.

On his first trip there, he went with nothing. After a few weeks, an organizati­on in the U.K., took over funding for the school he was working on.

For Day, the balance is keeping a low profile to keep ahead of those who would destroy the camps, and bringing awareness to the stark poverty of the refugees, who are also often ex- ploited by criminals and used as drug mules and prostitute­s.

“You are talking about extreme poverty,” he said.

“They are taken advantage of and there are no laws to protect them. The sad part is this group is so low on the totem pole.”

Bringing food to the camps must be done carefully, he said. The main item is rice, which is cheap. He hopes to send blankets, goats and chickens to the refugees, but doesn’t want to lose money that’s been given to help, as there are gangs in the camps.

He said the refugees’ plight and the human rights violations against them are not making news the way events in Iraq or Syria do, and the Canadian and American government­s are not pushing their cause as a human rights issue.

 ?? ANDREW DAY ?? A woman prepares a meal in the Rohingya refugee camps in Bangledesh.
ANDREW DAY A woman prepares a meal in the Rohingya refugee camps in Bangledesh.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Andrew Day is a Newfoundla­nder doing aid work in Bangladesh.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Andrew Day is a Newfoundla­nder doing aid work in Bangladesh.

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