The Daily Telegraph

Suu Kyi will address Rohingya crisis

Aid agencies overwhelme­d as number of refugees fleeing Burma exceeds that of those entering Europe

- By Bangladesh and in Cox’s Bazar,

Kathleen Prior

Nicola Smith

THE mass exodus of Rohingya Muslims fleeing Burma in just under three weeks is now triple the number of refugees who have tried to enter Europe across the Mediterran­ean so far this year, leaving aid agencies overwhelme­d. An estimated 370,000 have escaped from Burma’s northern Rakhine state to overcrowde­d Bangladesh­i refugee camps since Aug 25, compared to 128,012 people seeking to cross the Mediterran­ean since January.

Burma’s government admitted that 176 out of 471 ethnic Rohingya villages are now empty.

The Burmese government said yesterday its leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, will skip next week’s UN General Assembly meetings, and give a domestic speech to address the crisis.

Antonio Guterres, UN secretaryg­eneral, yesterday called on Burmese authoritie­s to end the violence and acknowledg­ed the situation is best described as ethnic cleansing.

Rohingyas have said their homes were set on fire and people shot, slashed or burned to death. “This is the fastest growing refugee crisis in the past five years, with serious human rights concerns,” a UNHCR spokesman told The Daily Telegraph.

Chris Lom, a UN aid worker in Cox’s Bazar, on the front line of the humanitari­an disaster, said people were “very vulnerable, traumatise­d,” while agencies struggled.

“UN agencies and the government were expecting the possibilit­y that as many as 100,000 more people could come across when there were already 600,000 Rohingyas in Bangladesh,” he told UN News.

“But I don’t think anyone expected a mass exodus like this, unpreceden­ted in terms of value and speed,” he said.

Yesterday, one Red Cross mobile medical team at the makeshift Balukhali camp managed to treat 100 people suffering from diarrhoea, old bullet relief wounds and burns before supplies ran out.

Isolated rural locations and throngs of displaced people present major obstacles to aid supply. Increasing­ly desperate refugees, weak from hunger, are clambering onto the few trucks that do get through, trying to claim whatever supplies they can, causing fights to break out.

Aid that arrived by air earlier this week would not cover a tenth of refugee needs, officials have said, estimating the relief effort would cost at least $77m (£58m).

 ??  ?? A young Rohingya man carries an elderly woman, after the wooden boat they were travelling on from Burma, crashed into the shore. An estimated 370,000 refugees have escaped Burma in the last three weeks
A young Rohingya man carries an elderly woman, after the wooden boat they were travelling on from Burma, crashed into the shore. An estimated 370,000 refugees have escaped Burma in the last three weeks

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