Friday, March 29, 2024 | Ramadan 18, 1445 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Race against time to bolster Rohingya camps

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Jared Ferrie -


Mohammad Rafiq was sitting in the shade of a tree, on a break from working to make his refugee camp in Bangladesh safer from the upcoming monsoon, when the hill above suddenly collapsed.


“I was buried up to my chest,” he said from a bed in a tent hospital run by the Finnish Red Cross. “I felt like I was going to die.”


His fellow labourers — Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, who were building up pathways with sandbags to raise them above floodwaters expected within weeks — strained Rafiq’s arm pulling him from the dirt, and his hip was dislocated in the landslip.


The risks of landslides and other disasters in camps that shelter more than 865,000 refugees will soar with the monsoon, which runs from April to October, and the cyclone seasons in April to May and October to November, aid workers say.


The sand-and-clay hills have been stripped bare of trees, further increasing the threat.


Toilets could be washed into flooded areas crowded with families, spreading disease, while bamboo and tarpaulin huts stacked on slopes may come crashing down, relief agencies warn.


“We have a mass casualty plan,” said Rea Noponen, team leader at the Red Cross hospital.


The hospital tents are built to withstand the monsoon, but would be blown away if a cyclone were to hit, she said.


Aid agencies are in a “race against the clock” to weather-proof the camps, said Suranga Mallawa of the European Union’s humanitarian arm, ECHO, which is funding some of that effort.


Fatalities remain likely, she warned.


“There is a very high risk that we are going to lose lives in the coming months,” she said.


The monsoon will put about 203,000 people in the Kutupalong “mega-camp” in danger, according to an assessment last month by the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) and the Asian Disaster Preparedness Center.


Aid agencies plan to move 24,000 refugees most at risk to the new site as soon it is ready.


More will follow, but there is not enough space to relocate all 203,000 people now in areas prone to landslides and floods.


ECHO’s Mallawa said an additional 1,500 acres of flat land is needed urgently.


Another concern is sanitation.


In Unchiprang camp, labourers extract sludge from latrines, filling barrels they sling from bamboo poles and carry up a steep hillside to the treatment area.


About 20,000 latrines need to be “de-sludged”, according to French charity Solidarités International.


If the work is not completed before the rains come - especially the most intense monsoon months from June to September - sewage could be washed into inhabited areas, causing outbreaks of diseases, including cholera.


Other workers reinforce slopes with bags of dirt, while the International Organization for Migration (IOM) runs workshops to provide refugees with techniques and kits to shore up shelters.


The IOM is also training some in first aid, and working with the World Food Programme to stock up on emergency supplies, including food and materials to repair shelters.


The future maintenance of the camp depends on money that has yet to materialise.


In March, the United Nations appealed for $951 million for the rest of the year. But less than a tenth of that is covered so far, said Mallawa.


Meanwhile, Mohammed Abul Kalam, Bangladesh’s relief and refugee repatriation commissioner, called for international pressure on Myanmar to end the crisis by enabling the Rohingya to return home and restoring their citizenship.


“It’s not possible for us to host them for an indefinite period of time,” he said.


“We are actually acting as the custodian of this population on behalf of the entire world.” — Thomson Reuters Foundation


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