Giving Compass' Take:
- Al Jazeera highlights the plight of Rohingya refugees who were moved to a Bangladesh island and barred from returning to the mainland amidst concerns about monsoon season.
- How can donors support Rohingya refugees in obtaining safety from monsoons and access to adequate health and education facilities?
- Learn about Myanmar’s genocide of Rohingya Muslims.
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Rohingya refugees moved to a Bangladesh island fear they will be exposed to terrible conditions during the upcoming monsoon season, and are struggling with “inadequate” health and education facilities, a Human Rights Watch report said.
About 18,800 refugees have been moved from the Cox’s Bazar region – where approximately 850,000 people live in squalid and cramped conditions after fleeing Myanmar – to the low-lying silt island of Bhasan Char in the Bay of Bengal.
A spokesman for the prime minister’s office told the AFP news agency that another 80,000 Rohingya would be moved to the island soon.
The Bangladesh government has insisted the relocation is voluntary, and that the island is safe from cyclones and its facilities are far better than the Cox’s Bazar camps.
Commodore Abdullah Al Mamun Chowdhury, the director of Bhashan Char project, has assured that the island has enough preparation to tackle the monsoon and tidal surge.
“Bhashan Char has a total of 120 cyclone shelter centres. Each of these centres can accommodate 1,000 people and 200 cattles during a storm. Those are also being constructed in a systematic manner. I don’t think any of the refugees living here are in danger,” he told Al Jazeera.
Read the full article about Rohingya refugees on Bhasan Char island at Al Jazeera.