Bangladesh
6 years ago

UN fails to manage initial funds for Rohingyas in BD

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The United Nations has not yet received even half of the funds it initially sought to respond to crisis Bangladesh is now facing with the newly arrived Rohingyas from Myanmar’s Rakhine State, reports bdnews24.com.

According to the UN office in Dhaka, the scale of the emergency has now surpassed its initial projections.

As of September 29, the plan has received $36.4 million, or 47 percent, of the funding requirements for the coordinated response.

The initial response plan, launched on September 7, sought $77 million to assist 300,000 people.

But the demand grew by this time as the number of refugees rose to half a million.

“Humanitarian partners are now revising the initial plan to account for the massive additional needs,” the UN office said.

Meanwhile, UN humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock and UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake will be visiting Bangladesh from Oct 2 to Oct 4 to see, first-hand, the devastating humanitarian situation of the Rohingya refugees.

UN Resident Coordinator Robert Watkins has called a media briefing on Monday in Dhaka.

This is the largest mass refugee movement in the region in decades.

The UN migration agency, IOM, and partner aid agencies said they are “struggling” to provide clean water and sanitation.

Meanwhile, the Inter-Sector Coordination Group (ISCG), which is coordinating the emergency response and is hosted by IOM, has said that approximately 59 million litres of safe water are now needed every day to meet the basic needs of the new arrivals.

Some 18,000 more emergency latrines are needed to provide access to basic emergency sanitation for all the new arrivals.

Since August 25, agencies have been able to reach only 141,070 people in Cox’s Bazar district with water, sanitation and hygiene assistance.

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