Relief agencies on Tuesday fought to contain a diarrhea outbreak around camps in Bangladesh where more than 500,000 Rohingya have taken shelter in the past five weeks.
The United Nations said meanwhile it would seek 430 million US dollars to increase operations in the camps along the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.
The Rohingya Muslims have poured across the frontier to escape a military crackdown in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.
Rohingya refugees who just arrived from Myanmar make their way to a relief
center in Teknaf, near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh, October 3, 2017. /Reuters Photo
Rohingya refugees who just arrived from Myanmar make their way to a relief
center in Teknaf, near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh, October 3, 2017. /Reuters Photo
A 20-bed treatment clinic was opened at Kutupalong refugee camp Monday to treat diarrhea victims and another 60-bed facility would be set up this week, a UN spokesman said.
UN staff and volunteers were touring Kutupalong and nearby makeshift camps to identify those who have not sought treatment, UN refugee agency spokesman Andrej Mahecic said.
"We have seen an increasing trend of diarrheal disease cases, including cases of diarrhea with severe dehydration," he said.
Bangladesh authorities were not aware of diarrhea-related deaths in the camps, but the health department said more than 10,500 Rohingya had been treated since the influx began on August 25.
Last week the World Health Organization warned of a growing cholera risk in the makeshift camps as they lacked safe drinking and hygiene facilities.
Rohingya refugees who arrived from Myanmar pick up their children and belongings
to make their way to a relief center in Teknaf, near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh,
October 3, 2017. /Reuters Photo
Rohingya refugees who arrived from Myanmar pick up their children and belongings
to make their way to a relief center in Teknaf, near Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh,
October 3, 2017. /Reuters Photo
The camps face dire shortages of food and medicine in what has become one of the world's largest refugee settlements.
The overwhelmed camps around the border town of Cox's Bazar already had 300,000 people who fled earlier violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State.
Mark Lowcock, a UN under secretary general for humanitarian affairs, said the world body would be seeking "something like 430 million US dollars to enable us to scale up the relief operation."
"Conditions in the camps at the moment are terrible," Lowcock told reporters in Cox's Bazar. The UN has already given an extra 12 million US dollars from its emergency response fund.
"What we want to do is to make sure that the tragedy of the Rohingya is not magnified and amplified by a human catastrophe and health catastrophe," the UN official declared.
Source(s): AFP