United
Nations, Sept 13: The United Nations humanitarian agencies have said that
the flow of desperate Rohingya fleeing across the border from Myanmar into
Bangladesh was unprecedented in terms of volume and speed, according to the UN
News Centre here. UN’s International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said here
in a press release yesterday that about 370,000 people have crossed the
Bangladeshi border in the last two and a half weeks. “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. But
I don’t think anyone expected a mass exodus like this, unprecedented in terms
of value and speed,” said IOM Asia-Pacific Spokesperson Chris Lom, speaking
with UN News from Cox’s Bazar, a thin stretch of beach in south-eastern
Bangladesh. Mr Lom, who is one of the UN aid workers on the ground, said the
people he spoke with are “very vulnerable, traumatised.” There are “hundreds of
people virtually camped out anywhere there is space. Any spare muddy piece of
land or on hillside,” he said, calling for a coordinated, emergency response
that is fully funded by the international community to avert a humanitarian
crisis. About 60 per cent of the Rohingya refugees – some 200,000 – are
children, according to Jean Lieby, Chief of Child Protection at the UN
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Bangladesh, who is also in Cox's Bazar. “The first
thing you see here in the different Rohingya camps is the large number of children.
You see children who have not slept for days, they are weak and hungry,” she
told journalists in Geneva by phone. Meanwhile, emergency relief supplies are
being airlifted to Bangladesh today, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) said. “A UNHCR-chartered Boeing 777 flew in with 91 metric
tonnes of aid,” spokesperson Adrian Edwards told the press, detailing a list
that includes shelter material, jerry cans, blankets, sleeping mats and other
essential items for 25,000 refugees. A second flight is scheduled to land later
today with some 1,700 family tents, with more aid to be delivered shortly. The
UN World Food Programme (WFP) has already provided some 68,800 people with
high-energy biscuits, including to women-friendly spaces supported by the UN
Population Fund (UNFPA), and some 77,600 people with warm meals, working
through a local partner. UN and aid partners have launched an emergency appeal
for Rohingya refugees, calling for $77 million to cover the next three months.
UNI
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