Yahoo – AFP,
Sam JAHAN, September 20, 2017
Cox's Bazar
(Bangladesh) (AFP) - Bangladesh's army was ordered Wednesday to take a bigger
role helping hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who have fled violence in
Myanmar, amid warnings it could take six months to register the new refugees.
Troops
would be deployed immediately in Cox's Bazar near the border where more than
420,000 Rohingya Muslims have arrived since August 25, said Obaidul Quader, a
senior minister and deputy head of the ruling Awami League party.
Soldiers
would help build shelters and toilets for the thousands of refugees still
sleeping in the open under pounding monsoon rain, Quader told AFP.
"The
army presence is especially needed on the spot to construct their shelters,
which is a very tough task, and ensure sanitation," he said.
The latest
order came from Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Quader said.
The
soldiers would also ensure order and assist with distributing relief, a chaotic
process that seen stampedes as donors have hurled food and other staples from
moving trucks.
Previously
troops had been tasked with transporting foreign relief supplies from the
country's port city of Chittagong airport to Cox's Bazar where the overcrowded
camps are located.
![]() |
Map of
Myanmar's Rakhine State showing areas where fires were detected by
satellites,
according to Human Rights Watch (AFP Photo/Gal ROMA)
|
As the
handful of ill-equipped camps rapidly reached capacity, Bangladesh announced it
would create a new site capable of housing some 400,000 refugees within 10
days.
Extra water
pumps have been installed at some locations, and concrete rings for latrines
stockpiled along the roadside.
But there
were few signs of major construction work underway, with many refugees
complaining they were being ordered to move on without any idea where to go.
"We
don't know where to go"
"We
don't know where would we go. We are poor. We managed to buy the bamboo and
tarpaulin with people's help, and now I have to relocate again," said
Mujibur Rahman, a 48-year-old Rohingya father of 10.
"I
don't know when this moving game will stop."
The
government has been trying to herd refugees into designated areas, fearful that
nearby cities could be overwhelmed if they are left unchecked.
"I
tried to go to the place where the Bangladeshi government said they set aside
land for us. But locals drove us out asking for money to settle us down,"
a Rohingya community leader, Yusuf Majhi, told AFP.
Local
authorities have set up a dozen relief centres and several emergency kitchens
to streamline aid distribution.
But efforts
by the army to officially register the new arrivals amid the crowded camps has
been moving at a glacial pace, said Brigadier General Saidur Rahman.
"We
are aiming to finish it within five or six months," said Rahman, who heads
the registration drive.
More
registration boothes would be erected to complete the mammoth task, he added.
Monsoon
downpours are compounding the misery.
Cox's Bazar
has been pounded with 21.4 centimetres (8.4 inches) of rain in the past five
days, raising fears of landslides in the unstable, muddy hills on which
thousands of refugees were camped.
Hundreds of
refugees were forced to abandon their shanties Wednesday in a rubber plantation
after heavy rain flooded the area, according to an AFP correspondent at the
scene.
![]() |
Rohingya
Muslim refugees carry an elderly woman along a road near Balukhali refugee
camp
near the Bangladehsi district of Ukhia on September 19, 2017 (AFP
Photo/
DOMINIQUE FAGET)
|
"My
tent has been flooded in knee-deep water. The children are suffering from the
cold," said Nur Mohammad, a 62-year-old Rohingya man who arrived in
Bangladesh with 16 members of his family.
Rohingya,
who are predominantly Muslim, are reviled by many in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.
The UN
human rights chief has described the systematic attacks against the Rohingya
minority by Myanmar's security forces as a "textbook example of ethnic
cleansing".
Sheikh
Hasina has issued a new call for Myanmar to take back some of the Rohingya.
Myanmar's
de-facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi said in a speech Tuesday that the country
would take back verified refugees.
But her
speech "did not present the real picture" of the Rohingya situation,
said Bangladesh's information minister Hasanul Haq, who has been briefing
reporters on the crisis.
"The
condition she set on the return of the refugees is not acceptable," he
said in Dhaka on Wednesday.
"Her
speech also did not highlight the ethnic oppression and genocide of the Rohingya."




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