Bangladesh, Help Refugees, Human Rights, Myanmar, Refugees issues, Religious Rights, Turkey
 
                              
                                                             
                                Many of them are thinking about advising their relatives in the refugee camps to move to the remote island at the estuary of the Meghna in Noakhali’s Hatia.
One of the refugees, Mohammad Hossain, has taken his wife and two children along with him but left behind his parents and the family of his brother at the Balukhali refugee camp.
“I feel better here. I’ll go to Cox’s Bazar after some time and try to bring them in. I’ll return alone if they don’t agree to come,” he said on Saturday after spending the first night at his new home.
Mohammad Jobayer from the Kutupalong refugee camp said: “I had never imagined I would be in such a good environment, in such a good house.”
The government has spent around Tk 31 billion on the project to relocate 100,000 out of over 1 million Rohingya people to the safer shelters from the refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar.
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The first batch of 1,642 refugees reached the 13,000-acre Bhasan Char on Friday after two days of journey by bus and vessel.
Many of the relocated refugees were sharing their experiences with those in Cox’s Bazar by phone. Some used video calls to show their new homes. The children began playing in open spaces.
The government has maintained all along that the relocated refugees will be in better conditions than their peers in the Cox’s Bazar camps, but the United Nations and other international agencies have distanced themselves from the project.
Expressing his views on the difference between the camps and Bhasan Char, Jobayer said: “They are incomparable. The houses are made of concrete here and the shanties in Cox’s Bazar are made of polythene sheets.”
The man, who brought his wife and three children along with him, said he would never go back to Cox’s Bazar.
Jul 29, 2023
It has been close to six years since hundreds of thousands of Rohingya faced a deadly genocide by Myanmar’s military and fled the country in search of protection and refuge in neighbouring Bangladesh. The Rohingya population has been undergoing persecution, discrimination, arbitrary arrests, and atrocities in Myanmar for over seven decades. Their condition is alarmingly […]