UN urges more land for Rohingya camps amid deadly landslides
- Since Monday, at least 15 people have died in the camps and more than 4,000 refugees have been displaced after torrential rains
Heavy rains caused deadly landslides in Bangladesh's overcrowded Rohingya camps, prompting the UN refugee agency to urge for more land to ensure refugee safety and decongestion.
- UNHCR's call for additional land to ease camp congestion.
- Deadly landslides and displacement in overcrowded Rohingya camps.
- Limited space and funding hindering refugee safety improvements.
COX’S BAZAR: The UN refugee agency called on Thursday for additional land to ease overcrowding in Bangladesh’s Rohingya refugee camps after heavy rains triggered landslides that have killed at least 15 people.
More than 1.2 million Rohingya refugees, many of whom fled Myanmar during a brutal military crackdown in 2017, live in congested camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar.
The refugees live in basic shelters on hillsides cleared of trees – making the land unstable during monsoon rains.
Since Monday, at least 15 people have died in the camps and more than 4,000 refugees have been displaced after torrential rains triggered multiple landslides, officials said.
In a report on Thursday, the UNHCR highlighted severe congestion in the camps and renewed calls for space expansion.
“The incidents reinforce the importance of ongoing advocacy for camp space optimisation and additional space, where feasible,” the report said.
“Additional space would support safer relocation from high-risk areas.”
Ivo Freijsen, a UNHCR representative in Bangladesh, said many of the dangers facing Rohingya refugees were “neither unforeseen nor unavoidable”.
The lack of space, coupled with funding shortages, was limiting opportunities to decongest the most “overcrowded and hazardous locations and to plan safer infrastructure”, he said in a statement.
Bangladesh authorities, who say they are already overstretched, have called for the dignified return of the Rohingya to their homeland.
The 2017 Myanmar crackdown, when Rohingya villages were burned and civilians were killed, is the subject of a genocide case at the UN’s top court in The Hague.























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