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Millions of children at risk after cyclone in Myanmar, Bangladesh: UNICEF

- XINHUA

The trail of destructio­n left by Cyclone Mocha, which tore through parts of Bangladesh and Myanmar, is causing severe disruption to the lives of millions of vulnerable children and families, including many already living in dire conditions, said the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) on Tuesday.

Even as the worst of the storm has passed, the risk of landslides remains high, and further dangers, including waterborne diseases, will likely grow in the days ahead, warned the fund.

Cyclone Mocha hit the coastlines of Bangladesh and Myanmar on Sunday afternoon, leaving behind destroyed homes, health facilities, schools, and other critical infrastruc­ture.

Many of the hundreds of thousands of people affected are refugees or internally displaced people living in poorly structured shelters in camps and hard-to-reach areas.

They rely heavily on humanitari­an assistance for food, water, health, education, and protection, said UNICEF.

"The areas hit hardest by the storm are home to communitie­s already living through conflict, poverty, instabilit­y, and climate and environmen­tal shocks," said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell in a press release.

The situation is particular­ly worrisome in Myanmar. More than 16 million people, 5.6 million of them children, were in the path of the cyclone in Rakhine State and locations in the north-west, said UNICEF.

In Bangladesh, home to the world's largest refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, 1 million Rohingya refugees faced the brunt of the heavy storms, half of them children.

The refugee camps rank among the most tightly packed places on earth and are also prone to mudslides, and children live in fragile temporary shelters, said UNICEF.

Cyclone Mocha tied with Tropical Cyclone Fani in 2019 as the strongest storm ever recorded in the North Indian Ocean. Scientists recently found that, while disaster management efforts have reduced the number of deaths during cyclones in recent years, climate change is threatenin­g this progress.

They noted that escalating frequency and intensity of storms will pose a far greater risk to Bangladesh in the coming decades, it said. While Cox's Bazar was spared the eye of the storm, thousands of people have been affected and several temporary shelters, facilities, and infrastruc­ture for refugees have been flooded and left severely damaged, it said.

Together with local partners, UNICEF is pre-positionin­g and deploying supplies in Bangladesh and Myanmar to ramp up response services, including water and sanitation, child protection, health, nutrition, and education, it said.

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