Eastern Eye (UK)

Rohingya refugee camp sees first Covid-19 death NINE PLACED IN ISOLATION AFTER CONTACT WITH VICTIM

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AN ELDERY man has become the first Rohingya living in vast refugee camps in Bangladesh to die from the coronaviru­s, an official said on Tuesday (2).

Toha Bhuiyan, a senior health official in the Cox’s Bazar district, said the 71-year-old died last Sunday (31) and confirmati­on of coronaviru­s as the cause came on Monday (1) night.

Mohammad Shafi, a Rohingya school teacher and a neighbour in the camps, said the man had long suffered from high blood pressure and a kidney complaint.

“Nobody realised that he was suffering from coronaviru­s. The news came as a shock to us,” Shafi said. “In recent weeks, a lot of people in the camps are suffering from fever, headache and body pain. But most think they got sick because of the change in weather. They don’t bother to get tested for coronaviru­s.”

The fatality was in the Kutupalong shelter in southeast Bangladesh – the biggest refugee camp in the world – which alone is home to roughly 600,000 people.

The man was among at least 29 Rohingya to have tested positive for the virus in the camps.

Health experts have long warned that the deadly virus could race through the vast cramped network of bamboo shacks housing almost a million refugees who have fled neighbouri­ng Myanmar since crackdown in 2017.

Bhuiyan said the victim died in an isolation centre run by the medical charity Doctors Without Borders and was buried in the camp the same day.

He said authoritie­s were trying to find people the deceased had been in contact with. Nine people have been placed in isolation. Bangladesh has seen a sharp rise in cases in recent weeks, with more than 60,000 infections and at least 709 deaths, as Eastern Eye went to press on Tuesday.

The first infection among Rohingya, also in Kutupalong, was reported in mid-May.

The 35-year-old man allegedly fled after testing positive and was found by police following a fourhour hunt in the camps. He was believed to have been infected at a hospital in a nearby town.

Officials stepped up testing and blocked roads leading to several areas of the camps where most of the infections have been recorded. Police used loud hailers to urge residents to follow social distancing rules.

The United Nations refugee agency, the UNHCR, is “working round the clock” to ensure testing is available, a spokespers­on said on Tuesday.

The group was also making sure there were adequate facilities to care for patients, as well as a military contact tracing and isolation of those people who may have been exposed to the virus.

Last week about 15,000 refugees were placed in quarantine as the number of cases increased.

Bangladesh and UN authoritie­s have prepared seven isolation centres with the capacity to treat more than 700 patients inside the camps. Bhuiyan said local officials – in the absence of internet access – would speak to camp administra­tors to spread awareness about the fatality.

Aid workers say many of the refugees know very little about the virus. They blame this partly on local authoritie­s cutting off access to internet in September to combat what they said were drug trafficker­s and other criminals.

“In the absence of mobile internet lots of rumours are spreading, and community members are not receiving updated informatio­n regarding Covid-19, as if it is something no one wants to touch,” said rights activist Rezaur Rahman Lenin, who has worked in the camps.

Mohammad Farid, a Rohingya community leader in Kutupalong, said: “We are very tense. A lot of people live here and barely anybody maintains any regulation to avoid the disease.

“This death only brings an ominous sign of what can happen to the larger mass in future.” (AFP)

 ??  ?? GRIM SITUATION: The fatality was in the Kutupalong shelter in southeast Bangladesh
GRIM SITUATION: The fatality was in the Kutupalong shelter in southeast Bangladesh
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