Rohingya crisis: UNICEF issues 'Child Alert'
Rohingya crisis: UNICEF issues 'Child Alert,' outlines urgent action to save lives
Mohammed Yasin, 8, is amongst the Rohingyas refugee children living in shelters at the Kutupalong makeshift camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Photo: UNICEF/UN0119119/Brown
20 October 2017 – Issuing a dire warning on the desperate situation of Rohingya refugee children, who now number more than 320,000 in Bangladesh, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has called for an end to the atrocities targeting civilians in Myanmar's Rakhine state, and immediate and unfettered access to all children affected by the violence there.
At present, UNICEF has no access to Rohingya children in northern Rakhine state, where horrific violence since late August has driven over half a million members of the minority Muslim community to seek refuge across the border in Bangladesh.
“Many Rohingya refugee children in Bangladesh have witnessed atrocities in Myanmar no child should ever see, and all have suffered tremendous loss,” said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake, releasing a new report Outcast and Desperate: Rohingya refugee children face a perilous future.
“This crisis is stealing
their childhoods. We must not let it steal their futures at
the same time.”
In the report, UNICEF has called for
urgent action in four key areas:
1. International support
and funding for the Bangladesh Humanitarian Response Plan
and humanitarian response plan for Myanmar;
2. Protection
of Rohingya children and families, and immediate unfettered
humanitarian access to all children affected by the violence
in Rakhine State;
3. Support for the safe, voluntary and
dignified return of Rohingya refugees to Myanmar;
and
4. A long-term solution to the crisis, including
implementation of the recommendations of the Advisory
Commission on Rakhine State.
The most pressing need for
thousands of refugees and refugee children is food, safe
water, sanitation and vaccinations. Psychosocial support,
education and counselling is also urgently
needed.
Meanwhile, the influx of refugees continues
unabated – between 1,200 and 1,800 children are arriving
per day (about 60 per cent the total number) and thousands
more are said to be on way.
To cope
with the crisis, UN relief agencies are working at full
tilt, but funding and resources are in short supply.
Ahead
of an international pledging conference on 23
October in Geneva, UNICEF has urged donors to respond
promptly to the requirements of the updated Bangladesh
Humanitarian Response Plan released jointly by the UN and
humanitarian agencies.
The Plan calls for $434 million,
including some $76.1 million to address the immediate needs
of newly-arrived Rohingya children, as well as those who
arrived before the recent influx, and children from
vulnerable host communities.
The ministerial-level conference, organized by the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), International Organization for Migration (IOM) and Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and co-hosted by the European Union and Kuwait, will provide Governments an opportunity to show their solidarity and share the burden and responsibility.
More than 700,000 over-one-year-olds vaccinated in massive campaign
In the midst of a crisis which appears to overwhelm any response, UN agencies successfully concluded the first phase of a massive oral cholera vaccine (OCV) campaign, reaching over 700,000 children and people over the age of one with protection against the deadly diarrheal disease.
“The coverage is
commendable as the oral cholera vaccination campaign was
planned and rolled out against very tight timelines,” said
Dr. N. Paranietharan, the head of the World Health
Organization (WHO) presence in Bangladesh.
Among
the 700,487 people inoculated since the campaign was
launched on 10 October, 179,848 are children aged between
one and five.
“[The campaign] demonstrates the commitment of the Government of Bangladesh, partners on the ground, as well as partners such as GAVI (a public–private global health partnership) and the International Coordinating Group on vaccine provision, to help secure the health and wellbeing of these immensely vulnerable people,” added the WHO official.
The second phase is scheduled for early November to give an additional OCV dose to children aged between one and five years, for added protection.
The vaccination campaign supplements other preventive measures, such as increased access to safe water, adequate sanitation and good hygiene. To help improve hygiene, a bar of soap was also handed out to each individual administered the vaccine.