UNICEF Scales-up Relief for Rohingya

200,000 Rohingya children at risk in Bangladesh camps, UNICEF says. 

 

New York, MINA – Amid an acute shortage of humanitarian supplies for the thousands of Rohingya arriving every day in Bangladesh, having fled violence in Myanmar, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is undertaking a “massive” scale-up of its emergency operations to ensure that those most vulnerable are not endangered further.

Up to 400,000 Rohingyas have been sheltering in Bangladesh since violence erupted across the border in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state in end-August and,WAM according preliminary estimates, about 60 per cent of them are children.

“There are acute shortages of everything, most critically shelter, food and clean water,” WAM reported, citing Edouard Beigbeder, the head of UNICEF in Bangladesh.

“Conditions on the ground place children at high risk of water-borne disease. We have a monumental task ahead of us to protect these extremely vulnerable children.”

In its response, the UN agency has been dispatching trucks filled with emergency water, sanitation and hygiene supplies to Cox’s Bazar (located near the Bangladesh-Myanmar border), with a steady stream of supplies in the pipeline for the coming days and weeks.

“These items are part of a first wave of supplies that will massively scale-up our emergency response to the growing number of Rohingya children in Bangladesh,” Mr. Beigbeder added, noting that UNICEF has appealed for $7.3 million to provide emergency support to Rohingya children over the next four months. (E/RS5/RS1)

Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)