Monsoon rains pound Rohingya refugee camps
As monsoon rains pound Rohingya refugee camps, UN food relief agency steps up aid
12 July
2019
Since 4 July, heavy monsoon rains
and wind have pounded the refugee camps in Bangladesh’s
Cox’s Bazar, with deaths, displacement and major damage
following in their wake, the World Food Programme (WFP) said
on Friday.
“Those in the
most vulnerable living situations have been relocated to
safer, newly developed land in the camps”, WFPSpokesperson Herve Verhoosel told the
regular news briefing in Geneva, noting that 5,600 people
had been displaced.
Telling reporters that additional rainfall is forecasted for the weekend, he underscored that “the destruction is caused by the most significant weather event in over a year, and it was triggered by monsoon weather systems in the Bay of Bengal”.
“Over 45,000 individuals have been affected by weather-related incidents since the end of April,” he said, noting that in July, WFP had provided rapid food assistance to thousands of refugees affected by monsoon rainfall, including cooked meals, high energy biscuits, and dry food, such as rice, lentil and oil.
While mud, water and traffic congestion has rendered camp movement on foot or in vehicles challenging, WFP has prepositioned emergency food supplies around the camps and is able to deliver assistance where it is needed most.
Currently, WFP has enough extra food in stock to feed the entire camp population of over 900,000 people for two weeks, if needed.
The UN food agency is racing to stabilize sliding slopes and damaged drainage systems.
According to Mr. Verhoosel, engineering and disaster risk reduction are ongoing with around 3,000 Rohingya refugees assisting in disaster risk reduction and around 700 for engineering.
However, because heavy rains threaten potential landslides, WFP emergency teams are standing by in the camps to quickly respond if necessary, including overnight.
Considering the damage wrought by the heavy rains, it is easy to imagine the devastation that the Rohingya refugees may have faced if WFP teams had not, before the monsoon season, completed readiness projects, including cyclone disaster risk reduction and monsoon preparedness activities, camp condition improvements and expanded humanitarian access.
Ongoing disaster risk reduction work consists of bridge repair, slope stabilization, drainage clearance, access road rehabilitation, reinforcing bridges in the camps, and reforestation, the WFP spokesperson said.
Almost two years after the 2017 influx of Rohingya refugees, the situation remains critical. Vulnerability to food insecurity prevails and would rapidly deteriorate if humanitarian assistance were decreased or discontinued.
At present, 80 per cent of refugees are entirely dependent on WFP food assistance, half of whom receive food distribution rations and the other half through e-vouchers, costing the UN agency $24 million monthly to feed almost 900,000 people.
“Without
continued support from the international community the
situation for these refugees would become increasingly
dire,” concluded the WFP
spokesperson.