FOR ROHINGYA
REFUGEE UNITED NATIONS PLEDGING CONFERENCE AND SEEKS $434 MILLION FOR AID
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND: The heads of
leading United Nations aid agencies kicked off a special one-day pledging
conference to raise aid of $434 million to provide life-saving assistance for
1.2 million peoples, including all Rohingya refugees and host communities in
Bangladesh and his adjacent areas. Before the pledging conference, a United Nations
refugee agency spokesman said number of Rohingya refugees that have fled
violence and persecution in Myanmar during the past two months has topped
600,000.
Aid agencies agreed, it is one of
the most severely underfunded crises in the world for the time being, which led
Mark Lowcock, Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency
Relief Coordinator to tell delegates the focus of the day’s event would be “to
mobilize resources to save lives and protect peoples.”
Under Secretary General for
Humanitarian Affairs said, “The new refugees arrivals include numbers of very
severely acutely malnourished children and the U.N. agencies will need to
continue to update and adapt our appeal to support beyond what we have put out
and we are discussing today. “Under Secretary said Let me be clear, funding is
a major constraint. We need more money to keep pace with intensifying needs”
The mass exodus of refugees into
Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh began August 25 after Rohingya insurgents killed nine
police officers, triggering vicious reprisal attacks by the Myanmar security
Forces. Low cock, who had visited Bangladesh earlier this month, described,
what he called heart-rending accounts of “killings, arson, rape, torture, and
other abuse,”
Under Secretary General said the
Rohingya were facing “a human, humanitarian and human rights nightmare.
Children, women and men fleeing Myanmar are streaming into Bangladesh
traumatized and destitute.” Bangladesh has been host to nearly 400,000
nationals from Myanmar, including Rohingya, for the past three decades.
Bangladesh’s Ambassador Shameem
Ahsan, to the U.N. in Geneva told the conference with the current arrival of
600,000 refugees, “the number of forcibly displaced Rohingyas in Bangladesh has
now reached nearly one million.” Bangladesh’s Ambassador noted that the current
situation was “the quickest exodus from a single country since the Rwandan
genocide in 1994. Despite claims to the contrary,” he said, “the violence in
Rhakhine State has not stopped. Thousands still enter on-a-daily-basis.”
Bangladesh’s Ambassador warned
the arrival of such a huge number of displaced people in Cox’s Bazar “created
massive socio-economic and demographic pressure on Bangladesh” and added that
other human security risks exist including “fear of epidemics.”
The Rohingya Muslims have lived
in the mainly Buddhist State of Rakhine for centuries, but have been denied
citizenship and remain the largest stateless minority in the world. Myanmar
considers them illegal migrants. “If the root causes are not addressed in
Myanmar urgently, we will not see the end of this crisis any time soon,” said
Filippo Grandi, U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
He agreed with others who noted
that the root of the problem lay with Myanmar and that the solution must be
found there. “So, it is important to focus on the solution.” This, he said
included an end to violence in Myanmar, the granting of unfettered access to
humanitarian agencies into northern Rakhine State and the creation of
“conditions for the right of return for the refugees.”
Though still in its infancy, a
political process to resolve this thorny issue is underway. The United Nations
and Myanmar authorities have begun discussions and the Bangladeshi Ambassador
announced that his government is continuing bi-lateral efforts with Myanmar to
find a durable solution.
William Lacy Swing, Director
General of the International Organization for Migration said it is important to
move quickly to support “the encouraging talks that are going on between
Bangladesh and Myanmar” and to create the conditions for the safe, secure,
dignified return of these long-suffering people “to their ancestral home.”
Since the crisis began, U.N.
agencies have been providing refugees with urgently needed food, shelter, water
and sanitation, health care, and other relief. All agree that humanitarian
operations need to be scaled up, but without additional money, this will be
difficult to do.
Pledges received at the end of
the one-day conference totaled more than $344 million. Though this was about
$90 million short of the goal, emergency relief coordinator, Mark Lowack, said
that he was encouraged.
“Of course, pledges are one
thing” he said. It is really important to us that the pledges are translated as
soon as possible into contributions and go into the agency bank accounts.”
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