Nations pledge $340 million to Rohingya response

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Rohingya Muslims, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, wait for their turn to collect bamboos for the construction of shelters for them near Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. More than 580,000 refugees have arrived in Bangladesh since Aug. 25, when Myanmar security forces began a scorched-earth campaign against Rohingya villages. Myanmar's government has said it was responding to attacks by Muslim insurgents, but the United Nations and others have said the response was disproportionate. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)

 

GENEVA: Nations have pledged $340 million to care for Myanmar’s Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, an “encouraging” step in the response to the intensifying crisis, the UN said Monday.

Many of the funds for the minority Muslim group, who have fled from violence in the northern part of Myanmar´s Rakhine state, were promised at a high-level conference in Geneva, co-hosted by the United Nations, the European Union and Kuwait.

The UN says it needs $434 million to provide support through February for the 900,000 Rohingya who have fled across the border, as well as the 300,000 local Bangladeshis hosting the influx.

“We’ve had an encouraging morning,” the UN´s humanitarian chief, Mark Lowcock, told reporters. “We now have pledges of 340 million dollars.”

Some of the money was promised in the run-up to the conference and Lowcock said he expected more commitments in the coming days.

A group of nations had also offered $50 million of in-kind donations.

Lowcock stressed the importance of countries actually delivering the cash, with the UN having confronted unfulfilled pledges in past crises.

“Pledges are one thing,” he told reporters. “It’s really important to us that the pledges are translated as soon as possible into contributions”.

With no apparent resolution to the crisis in sight, Lowcock noted that there may be a need to raise more funds again next year.

The head of the International Organization for Migration, William Lacey Swing, called the wave of Rohingya fleeing to Bangladesh “the fastest growing refugee crisis in the world.”

“It is, in its own way, a nightmare,” he added.

Bangladesh’s government and the community in the Cox’s Bazar area on the Myanmar border have been broadly praised for the response to Rohingya refugee influx, notably for keeping the border open.

Rohingya refugees have headed for Bangladesh in huge numbers after militant attacks on Myanmar security forces in Rakhine sparked a major army crackdown on the community likened to ethnic cleansing by the UN.

Rohingyas have been systematically deprived of basic rights over decades in majority Buddhist Myanmar.

In the latest crackdown, Myanmar´s security forces have fired indiscriminately on unarmed civilians, including children, and committed widespread sexual violence, according to UN investigators.