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POST TIME: 5 May, 2018 00:00 00 AM
Rohingya crisis
Monsoon response efforts in full swing, says UNHCR 
UNB

Monsoon response efforts 
in full swing, says UNHCR 

OIC delegates arrive at Kutupalong Rohingya camp in Ukhia upazila of Cox’s Bazar yesterday. AFP photo

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, yesterday said it is rushing additional aid to Bangladesh where the first monsoon rains have been affecting Cox's Bazar district and hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees there, reports UNB. The first of three scheduled humanitarian airlifts carrying additional shelter materials arrived in Bangladesh on Tuesday. Its load, 1,400 tents, is the first batch of 10,000 tents that UNHCR will airlift by the end of May.

The aim is for the tents to provide emergency shelter for an estimated 60,000 refugees currently residing in areas at high risk of landslides and flooding. “By the end of May, UNHCR plans to equip all refugee families with shelter kits, which will include bamboo poles, ropes, shelter-grade tarpaulins, sandbags, and tools,” said UNHCR spokesperson Andrej Mahecic in Geneva on Friday.

In addition, UNHCR is distributing 80,000 pre-monsoon kits to help secure shelters in case of storms, and is stockpiling 160,000 post-disaster response kits to be distributed to refugees, as well as another 30,000 post-disaster response kits to be distributed to any families who might be affected among the host community.

“UNHCR has already positioned five hospital tents and emergency health kits in Cox’s Bazar. More medicines and supplies are being ordered,” said the spokesperson.

Aid is also being moved by sea; this includes additional tents, 170,000 tarpaulins sheets, and other basic items.

Humanitarian partners estimate that between 150,000 and 200,000 Rohingya refugees will be at risk this monsoon season. They are living on land prone to landslides and flooding and are in urgent need of relocation.

Of this number, 24,000 people are at critical risk due to severe instability of the land on which their shelters have been constructed.

Since August 2017, more than 670,000 Rohingya refugees have fled to Bangladesh, joining over 200,000 refugees already in the country.

In a massive effort to shelter refugees and meet their basic needs, Bangladesh has generously allocated thousands of acres of land that has already been settled on by refugees.

In addition, the government has recently allocated new land for refugees to settle on.

UNHCR, IOM and WFP engineers are working around the clock to flatten this land to accommodate those at greatest risk.

Heavy machinery and thousands of labourers are working on this.

“Nonetheless this work is going more slowly than initially anticipated due to the hilliness and instability of the land. UNHCR hope to relocate some 5,000 people to the new land by the end of May,” said the spokesperson.

In the absence of more available and usable land, UNHCR has made temporary emergency relocation arrangements, which will be activated as needed.

An estimated 35,000 refugees can be hosted by other refugees living in safer areas; 34,000 refugees can be hosted in communal structures in refugee settlements; and 66,000 refugees can be hosted in tents or other emergency shelters within or adjacent to the current settlements.

Meanwhile, in support of Bangladesh’s intensive efforts to ready the refugee settlements for the monsoon rains, UNHCR is further strengthening its own emergency preparedness and response capacity - in an effort to save lives, reduce health, landslide and flood risks and preserve access to settlements.