Rohingya crisis
Rohingya crisis
Rohingya families fled
violence. But six years later, uncertainty about the future still grips those
living in the world’s largest refugee settlement.
UNICEF/UN0687978/Spiridonova
Updated 8 January 2024
What is the Rohingya crisis?
When hundreds
of thousands of terrified Rohingya refugees began flooding onto the beaches and
paddy fields of southern Bangladesh in August 2017, it was the children who
caught many people’s attention. As the refugees – almost 60 per cent of
whom were children – poured across the border from Myanmar into
Bangladesh, they brought with them accounts of the unspeakable violence and
brutality that had forced them to flee.
Those fleeing
attacks and violence in the 2017 exodus joined around 300,000 people already in
Bangladesh from previous waves of displacement, effectively forming the world’s
largest refugee camp. Six years later, about half a million Rohingya refugee
children are living in exile from their home country. Many of them have been
born into this limbo.
Rohingya
refugee crisis | UNICEF
|
How is the Rohingya crisis affecting
children?
While basic
services have been provided, children still face disease outbreaks,
malnutrition, inadequate educational opportunities and the risks related to
neglect, exploitation and violence including gender-based violence risks, child
marriage and child labour. Meanwhile, annual cycles of heavy monsoon and
cyclones pose substantial risks to both Rohingya refugees and host communities.
In
Myanmar, most
Rohingya have no legal identity or citizenship and statelessness remains a
significant concern. Rohingya children in Rakhine State, meanwhile, have
been hemmed in by violence, forced displacement and restrictions on freedom of
movement.
Until the
conditions are in place in Myanmar that would allow Rohingya families to return
home with basic rights – safety from violence, citizenship, free movement,
health and education – they are stuck as refugees or internally displaced
persons living in overcrowded and sometimes dangerous conditions.
Older children
and adolescents who are deprived of opportunities to learn or make a living are
at real risk of becoming a “lost generation”
Older children
and adolescents who are deprived of opportunities to learn or make a living are
at real risk of becoming a “lost generation,” ready prey to traffickers and
those who would exploit them for political or other ends. Girls and women are
at particular risk of sexual and other gender-based violence in this situation,
including being forced into early marriage and being left out of school as
parents keep them at home.
Crisis snapshot
Rohingya children in need of
assistance:
About 499,000
Rohingya population in need of
assistance:
More than 960,000
This map is
stylized and not to scale, and does not reflect a position by UNICEF on the
legal status of any country or territory or the delimitation of any frontiers.
UNICEF has been
on the ground in the refugee camps in Bangladesh from day one, and is still
there for every Rohingya refugee child who needs clean water, health care,
protection, nutritious food and education.
Working with
the Government of Bangladesh and partners, UNICEF is helping provide water and
sanitation, including the establishment of diarrhoeal treatment centres, health
services for children and pregnant women; support for access to quality
education, including establishing learning centres; and is reaching children
affected by violence, abuse and neglect with prevention and assistance.
It is critical
that the rights and dignity of the Rohingya refugees be respected, protected
and promoted. Ensuring that Rohingya refugees have educational opportunities,
access to health care and services, clean water and sanitation, as well as have
access to livelihood opportunities which will ensure that the refugees are
equipped and ready to return to a life of dignity in their homeland.
All children
deserve equitable and inclusive access to education. To help prevent a “lost
generation,” UNICEF and partners have enrolled
more than 300,000 children in classes. Rohingya children and their parents have made it
clear that they want an education based on the Myanmar curriculum. The start of
the 2023/24 school year marks the first time that Rohingya refugee children of
all ages will be studying under the Myanmar Curriculum.
Read
more about UNICEF’s work and results.
Get the most up-to-date statistics available on the
situation in Bangladesh and Myanma
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