The Borneo Post

Bangladesh’s mega refugee camp plan ‘dangerous’ — UN official

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COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh: A top UN official said yesterday Bangladesh’s plan to build the world’s biggest refugee camp for 800,000-plus Rohingya Muslims was dangerous because overcrowdi­ng could heighten the risks of deadly diseases spreading quickly.

The arrival of more than half a million Rohingya refugees who have fled an army crackdown in Myanmar’s troubled Rakhine state since Aug 25 has put an immense strain on already packed camps in Bangladesh.

Hard-pressed Bangladesh authoritie­s plan to expand a refugee camp at Kutupalong near the border town of Cox’s Bazar to accommodat­e all the Rohingya.

But Robert Watkins, the UN resident coordinato­r in Dhaka, told AFP the country should instead look for new sites to build more camps.

“When you concentrat­e too many people into a very small area, particular­ly the people who are very vulnerable to diseases, it is dangerous,” Watkins told AFP.

“There are stronger possibilit­ies, if there are any infectious diseases that spread, that will spread very quickly,” he said, also highlighti­ng fire risks in the camps.

“It is much easier to manage people, manage the health situation and security situation if there are a number of different camps rather than one concentrat­ed camp.”

At the request of the Bangladesh government, the UN’s Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration (IOM) has agreed to coordinate the work of aid agencies and help build shelters at the new camp site.

According to the IOM, the proposed camp will be the world’s largest, dwarfing Bidi Bidi in Uganda and Dadaab in Kenya — both housing around 300,000 refugees.

One thousand two hundred acres of land next to the existing Kutupalong camp have been set aside for the new Rohingya arrivals.

“700,000 is a big camp... we and our partners will have our work cut out for us”, Joel Millman, an IOM spokesman, told reporters in Geneva on Friday. — AFP

 ??  ?? Rohingya Muslim refugee take shelter from the rain at the registrati­on centre in Teknaf in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district. — AFP photo
Rohingya Muslim refugee take shelter from the rain at the registrati­on centre in Teknaf in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district. — AFP photo

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