Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh camps await new danger: rain
KUTUPALONG, Bangladesh — The Rohingya refugees have escaped soldiers and gunfire. They have escaped mobs that stormed through their villages, killing and raping and burning. They have fled Myanmar, their homeland, to find shelter in sprawling refugee camps in neighbouring Bangladesh.
Now there’s a new danger: rain.
The annual monsoon will soon sweep through the immense camps where some 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have lived since last year, when they poured across the border in search of safety. The clusters of bamboo and plastic huts, built along endless waves of steep hills, are now facing a deluge that, in an average year, dumps anywhere from 40 to 60 centimetres (16 to 24 inches) of rain per month.
“I will not be able to light a fire. The wells will flood and I won’t be able to get water. The outhouses will be destroyed. The house might also break down,” sobbed Rahana Khatun, 45, who fled Myanmar last year with her husband and five children. “What will happen to us then?”