Caritas appeals for aid for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh

Caritas appeals for aid for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
Rohingya refugees line up to get food from the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh. Photo: CNS /Zohra Bensemra, Reuters

DHAKA (UCAN): Caritas Internationalis made a passionate call in Dhaka on June 6 to help it raise US$7 million to aid Rohingya refugees, victims of conflicts in Myanmar, as attention has moved away from them amid many other global emergencies.

“We must not forget the Rohingya people or take the support of the Bangladesh government for granted,” said Alistair Dutton, secretary general of Caritas Internationalis.

Rohingya families are “among the most vulnerable people in our world today without the right to work,” said the leader of the Church charity.

Dutton was speaking to the media after visiting Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar, the world’s largest refugee settlement that houses a million Rohingya refugees from neighbouring civil war-hit Myanmar.

Teenagers “have now spent half of their life” in camps,” he said.

Dutton’s visit follows Pope Francis’ recent renewed appeal to solve the Rohingya refugee crisis. The pope met a Rohingya group during his visit to Bangladesh in 2017.

Global aid for Rohingya has decreased amid other emergencies like the Ukraine war and the Palestine conflict.

According to Caritas Bangladesh, global funds to meet the food expenses of Rohingya refugees have come down to US$10 from US$12 per person per month.

We must not forget the Rohingya people or take the support of the Bangladesh government for granted

Alistair Dutton

Bangladesh faces a foreign currency crisis, and skyrocketing inflation has made essential goods dearer.

Bangladesh’s appeal for US$852.4 million in aid to help the refugees also missed its target, and the densely populated nation has beefed up security to prevent a further refugee influx.

Caritas plans to give the community US$7 million in aid in 2024. Between 2017 and 2023, it spent $45 million in emergency efforts for Rohingya refugees and on host community members in Bangladesh.

Bangladesh does not allow the refugees to work and their mobility is restricted within the camps. Education and health facilities are reported to be the namesake.

“Over the past six years, more than 200,000 children have been born in these camps,” Dutton observed, adding that that they had never seen their home country and had no nationality.

“They are stateless,” he said.

Dutton said that the temporary camps made of bamboo and plastic sheets can perish quickly. “In the last two weeks, there were two fires that damaged hundreds of camps,” he noted.

On June 7, after winding up his three-day visit to Bangladesh, he flew to Myanmar, where armed rebels are giving the ruling military a tough time to.

In Rakhine, the home state of Rohingyas on the southeastern Bangladesh border, hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have been displaced as the fighting increased this year.

According to the United Nations, some 15,000 Rohingyas have taken shelter close to the border of Bangladesh.

Caritas Asia president, Benedict Alo D’ Rozario, said the organisation was working with Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, and India to help repatriate Rohingya refugees.

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