- 2021-07-28 22:35:46
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-21 14:10:14
Floods, landslides hit Rohingya camps hard: UNHCR
Photo: Collected
Citizen Times Desk: Dhaka, Jul-29,
More than 12,000
refugees have been affected, while an estimated 2,500 shelters have been
damaged or destroyed by heavy downpours, the UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, has
said.
In the last 24 hours
alone, over 300mm of rain fell on camps hosting more than 8 lakh Rohingya
refugees – nearly half the monthly rainfall average for July in one day.
Three days of heavy
monsoon rains and strong winds pelted massive refugee sites in Bangladesh's
Cox's Bazar Tuesday, causing flash floods and landslides; the situation is
further compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic, the UNHCR said.
More rains are expected
in the next few days, with the monsoon season stretching over the next three
months, the UN agency added.
There is currently a
strict national lockdown in response to rising cases across the country.
In support of the
government-led response, the UNHCR's network of emergency response teams have
been deployed, to provide immediate support and assistance to affected families
and to those forced to temporarily relocate.
Teams are also
assessing the damage to shelters and initiating immediate shelter repairs and
site improvements.
Refugee volunteers
trained by the UNHCR, and partners are also working day and night in heavy rain
to help families in urgent need. In some cases, this has involved rescuing
refugees from shelters destroyed by landslides.
So far, more than 5,000
refugees have temporarily relocated to other family member's shelters or
communal facilities.
The adverse weather,
latest landslides and floods further exacerbate the suffering and massive
humanitarian needs of the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.
To date, the 2021 Joint Response Plan for the Rohingya humanitarian crisis in Bangladesh has received only $274 million, roughly 30% of the $943 million required for the response this year.
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