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(Reuters) – Bangladesh plans to allocate more land for camps housing Rohingya refugees as concerns grow over a possible outbreak of disease in crowded, makeshift settlements clustered at the country’s southern tip.
About 625,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to sanctuary in Bangladesh from violence, looting and destruction in neighboring Myanmar after government forces launched a counter insurgency following attacks by Rohingya militants on Aug. 25.
The swift exodus has taken the Rohingya refugee population to 837,000, making Bangladesh one of the world’s largest, most crowded settlement of asylum-seekers.
More than 60 percent of the water supply in the camps is contaminated with bacteria as temporary latrines overflow into hastily-built, shallow wells, a World Health Organization survey showed. Faecal sludge in the settlements goes largely untreated.
“There is a high risk of a public health event, not just cholera and acute watery diarrhea,” said Naim Talukder of the group Action Against Hunger, who is coordinating the efforts of 31 groups and agencies to manage water, sanitation and hygiene.
A Reuters graphic uses satellite imagery to document the mushrooming spread of the refugee areas. Data show the challenge of meeting international standards for water, sanitation and hygiene in the camps and spillover sites.
Click on the link for the Reuters Graphic – tmsnrt.rs/2AoMIaV
MORE LAND NEEDED
Most refugees live in flimsy bamboo and canvas shelters in an area crowded well beyond emergency standards, said Graham Eastmond, an official of the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
“You are talking a third of the international standard,” he said. “We need to decongest urgently and obviously, to do that, we need more land.”
The IOM is among the bodies that have urged Bangladesh to free up more land and allow a wider spread of settlements.
“The government already allocated 3,000 acres of land for the Rohingya,” Shah Kamal, a disaster management official, told Reuters. That figure is equivalent to 1,214 hectares.
“Considering the current situation, the government is planning to allocate 500 acres more land for them,” he added.
Last week, Bangladesh approved a $280-million project to develop an isolated and flood-prone island in the Bay of Bengal to temporarily house 100,000 Rohingya, despite criticism from rights groups.
The overcrowding spells health and safety risks, Eastmond added, from rapidly spreading water-borne and communicable diseases to landslides and flooding, besides swelling the threat to vulnerable children and women.
Single women or children head about a fifth of households, preliminary findings of a population survey by the U.N. refugee agency and Bangladesh show.
By Nov. 11, there were 36,096 cases of acute watery diarrhea since Aug. 25, as infection rates climbed, the U.N. children’s agency said last month.
Bangladesh, in partnership with U.N. agencies and charities, has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in responding to the crisis.
New roads built by the army will open this month, boosting access for camp-dwellers, said Eastmond.
Yet just 23 percent of funding needs for water, sanitation and hygiene services are being met, Talukder said.
Bangladesh and Myanmar vowed to begin the voluntary return of the Rohingya to Myanmar in the next two months.
But the Rohingya will have to present identity documents in order to be accepted, said Myint Kyaing, a Myanmar labor and immigration ministry official.
Relief officials fear that few Rohingya, a stateless and long-persecuted minority in Myanmar, carried such documents in their desperate scramble to leave.
Hundreds of Rohingya villages have been razed, their land given to others and their crops harvested.
Editing by Darren Schuettler and Clarence Fernandez
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