#Immigrations; #Refugees; #Fire; #Bangladesh
Bangladesh/CMEDIA: Teams from UN migration agency IOM were mobilized on Sunday after a fire swept through a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, home to thousands of Rohingya who have fled violence in neighboring Myanmar.
The blaze was first reported just before 5 pm local time and caused considerable damage to sections of the largest camp of its kind in the world, affecting both refugees and members of the host community.
Response teams were deployed to protect refugees and bring the situation back under control, in coordination with the local authorities and fire brigade.
Coordinating support
So far, the cause and origin of the blaze are unknown, and no fatalities have been reported, though two people were reportedly injured.
“We are coordinating with other humanitarian actors to ensure that those affected are provided with food, health, protection, water, sanitation, and hygiene needs,” said Nusrath Ghazzali, officer-in-charge for IOM Bangladesh.
Top priorities include shelter repair and rebuilding, as well as access to cooking facilities.
The World Food Programme (WFP) on Monday reported that it has begun serving hot meals to some 2,200 camp residents.
The agency will distribute hot meals twice daily to all families who now have no means of cooking for themselves.
Second blaze
The incident follows an earlier large fire that broke out on 2 January, which resulted in significant damage to IOM’s Severe Acute Respiratory Infection and Isolation and Treatment Center (SARI ITC).
IOM and humanitarian partners in Cox’s Bazar plan to conduct technical assessments of the damage from Sunday’s fire, and the immediate and longer-term needs of those affected.
A mobile medical team is on the ground providing assistance as needed. Another team is being deployed within the camp to ensure people have access to accurate and useful information.
Increased fire risks
IOM has also taken immediate steps to mobilize non-food item kits for affected households. The kits are being supplemented with blankets, given the current cold dry weather.
Conditions in the camps make large fires a real risk, the agency said. Last March, a massive fire claimed several lives, and displaced some 45,000 Rohingya refugees, in addition to causing catastrophic damage.
Roughly one million Rohingya have fled violence across the border in Myanmar for Bangladesh since the early 1990s. More than 600,000 are living in a network of camps in Cox’s Bazar, which is located in the southeast of the country.