By MSN
Crammed into squalid camps, thousands of people who fled communal
violence in Myanmar face a deepening humanitarian crisis with critical
shortages of food, water and medicine, aid workers say.
More than 100,000 people have been displaced since June in two major
spasms of violence in western Rakhine State, where renewed clashes last
month between Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims uprooted about
30,000 people.
Dozens were killed on both sides and thousands of homes were torched.
Even
in the camps near the state capital Sittwe housing ethnic Rakhine
Buddhists -- who have freedom of movement and are able to work if they
can find employment -- people are going hungry.
"We don't have
enough to eat," said Phyu Ma Thein, 33. "The abbot gave us a bowl of
rice but we have no pots, no plates. We have nothing. We're just trying
to survive."
The situation is likely to deteriorate, the UN
Refugee Agency warned this week, as a new influx of refugees pushes the
camps "beyond capacity in terms of space, shelter and basic supplies
such as food and water".
"Food prices in the area have doubled and there are not enough doctors to treat the sick and wounded," it added.
Most of the displaced are Rohingya, described by the UN as among the world's most persecuted minorities.
Seen
by the government and many Burmese as illegal immigrants from
neighbouring Bangladesh, Myanmar's 800,000 stateless Rohingya have long
faced severe discrimination, according to rights groups.
Their
displacement camps are at crisis point, according to Refugees
International (RI) which estimates that even before last month's
flare-up nearly a quarter of children in the squalid facilities were
malnourished.
"Conditions in these camps are as bad if not worse
than ones in Eastern Congo or Sudan," Melanie Teff, a researcher with
the charity who visited Sittwe in September, told AFP from London.
"Child
malnutrition rates are startlingly high. There's an urgent need for
clean water and food. If further aid does not come through there will be
some unnecessary deaths," she said.
With tens of thousands of
Rohingya in outlying villages struggling to make a living since security
collapsed after June's unrest, Teff fears official camps could be
overwhelmed by a new wave of refugees over the coming months.
Myanmar,
which is opening up after decades of secretive junta rule, has said it
has to accept aid from Muslim countries or face an international
backlash.
That concession by President Thein Sein last month came
despite a series of angry protests by Myanmar Buddhists against efforts
by a world Islamic body to help Muslims affected by the violence in
Rakhine.
But the flow of aid is still sluggish to the tinderbox province.
In
Baw Du Pha relief camp, where several thousand Rohingya refugees from
Sittwe live cheek-by-jowl, surviving on rations and severely short of
medical care, a mother-of-four told AFP Friday of her family's
desperation.
"I cannot give my baby rice when she needs it. We are
suffering," said Laila, 20. "When my daughter gets sick we have no
money for medicine."
Compounding the immediate need for essentials
such as rice, water and oil, aid workers say refugees are facing a
mounting psychological toll with terrified children bearing the brunt.
"They
lost their houses in the fires. Children cannot be left alone like
before. So they're depressed," said Moe Thadar, a local Red Cross
worker.
With tensions still at boiling point despite beefed-up
security, the relief effort is in jeopardy and the outlook for peace is
grim unless the two communities can somehow reconcile, according to
Teff.
"As it stands there is a total lack of hope for the
Rohingya. They have been rejected by many countries. They have suffered
all around," she said. "The only way out is for the international
community to act on the current situation."
The UNHCR said the
recent bloodshed spurred several thousand Rohingya to take to rickety
boats this week in the hope of finding shelter at camps on the coast
near the outskirts of Sittwe or escaping the country altogether.
But
tragedy awaits even in flight, as around 130 people went missing after
one boat sank off the coast near Bangladesh's border with Myanmar while
carrying Rohingya refugees heading for Malaysia.
Dozens of other
boats were repelled by nervous Myanmar security forces near Sittwe,
leaving them with no choice but to dock on the barren shoreline,
according to an AFP reporter who visited the scene this week.
"Humans
need shelter, a place to sleep and eat," said Myint Oo, a displaced
Muslim who has lost his house and fishing business. "If you cannot eat
and sleep, it's worse than dying."
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