Arab News

Aid groups on alert as Rohingya food rations drop below humanitari­an norm

- Shehab Sumon Dhaka

Aid groups raised an alert on Thursday that rapidly decreasing humanitari­an assistance threatens the lives of 1 million Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh as the UN has further reduced their food rations. Since the beginning of June, the UN World Food Programme’s food aid for the Rohingya sheltering in Bangladesh has been cut to $8 per month. The WFP first reduced the rations in March, from $12 to $10, citing funding shortages.

Even before the first reduction, the rations provided to the Rohingya were already insufficie­nt and posed health problems for the refugee population. UN special rapporteur­s warned in February that the refugee population in Bangladesh was food insecure, with more than a third of children stunted and underweigh­t. Most of the refugees affected by the cuts are those who escaped deadly violence and persecutio­n in neighborin­g Myanmar during a military crackdown in 2017. They

live in cramped camps of Cox’s Bazar district — the world’s largest refugee settlement — where they cannot be legally employed to earn their livelihood as Bangladesh is not a signatory to the 1951 UN Refugee Convention. As the new food reduction came into force, NGO Platform Cox’s Bazar sounded an alarm that it will have severe impacts on the refugees and the host community.

“This reduction in ration will push the current food assistance provided to the Rohingyas … far below the recognized global humanitari­an standard of 2,100 kcal, entailing a significan­t drop in refugees’ food intake,” the group, which includes BRAC, Plan Internatio­nal, Save the Children, and the Norwegian Refugee Council, said in a call for action. “Even before the first round of food ration cut in March 2023, with WFP’s food assistance, four in 10 families were not consuming enough food.”

The platform warned of looming tensions with the host community and multi-dimensiona­l social conflict.

“Cuts in essential humanitari­an assistance have severe impacts on the refugees and the host community, which lead potentiall­y to criminal activities, such as theft and robbery, increased domestic violence, gender-based violence, and neglect towards persons with disabiliti­es and older individual­s in the community,” the group said.

Rezaul Karim, head of humanitari­an operations of BRAC — the largest developmen­t organizati­on based in Bangladesh and NGO Platform member — told Arab News that the impacts of the new food cut were expected to be seen already in the next few days.

 ?? AFP ?? Rohingya refugee women distribute food in the Kutupalong refugee camp, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, Sept. 15, 2017.
AFP Rohingya refugee women distribute food in the Kutupalong refugee camp, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, Sept. 15, 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia