Imagine having to escape violence in your home country.
You pick up what you can, but you need to leave right now, what would you take? The violence may be right at your door, you may become separated from family and friends in the chaos. Now you need to travel to another country and find shelter there.
Red Cross teams on the ground are working hard to meet the needs of those fleeing violence in makeshift settlements and crowded camps, where conditions are extremely difficult. Emergency food assistance, clean water, shelter and health services are being provided to families. Red Cross Red Crescent teams are providing medical help in the transit centre and meeting new arrivals in Mainnerghona camp. Every day, up to 100 volunteers from the Bangladesh Red Crescent are on the ground.
Health
The Canadian Red Cross is supporting efforts to provide emergency relief and medical care to vulnerable people throughout the refugee camps. At the Red Cross emergency hospital, approximately 250 patients are treated each day. With the help of generous donations from Canadians, we have also sent a mobile health team to give essential health services to people who otherwise would be out of reach. The Government of Canada supports us in ensuring that emergency hospital equipment and aid workers are ready to go when needed.
Protection
Huge numbers of children are arriving on their own and are highly vulnerable – girls are particularly at risk of trafficking and exploitation, which are both common in these types of crises. Safe spaces for women and children inside the camps have been created in order to provide protection, and to help reconnect children who have been separated from their parents.
The Red Cross has also put in place procedures to identify possible victims of human trafficking and exploitation, and has set up safe spaces where women and children can go to for support.
The people who have fled violence and lost everything deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.
Family reunion
Kjerstin Rastad from the Norwegian Red Cross psychosocial support team tells us the story of a little girl who couldn’t find her mother amidst the confusion when she arrived at the Transit Camp in the middle of the night.
Food, water and shelter
People arriving in camps are exhausted, dehydrated and hungry. Conditions in the camps and makeshift settlements are extremely harsh – people are living on steep, cramped hillsides under pieces of plastic sheeting. Some have been sleeping without adequate protection from the weather for more than a month.
The Red Cross and Red Crescent is distributing food, water, blankets, tarpaulins and other emergency relief items.
How You Can Help
The complexity and speed of the humanitarian crisis in Bangladesh and Myanmar has been overwhelming as thousands of people flee violence in the northern areas of Myanmar’s Rakhine State into Bangladesh.
Red Cross Red Crescent volunteers and aid workers are working hard – often under very difficult circumstances – to provide critical assistance to those in need. And with more people arriving each day, medical needs are ever increasing and thousands of people need emergency care.
Even if the number of people impacted seems enormous to you, every bit you can contribute goes a long way to meeting their basic needs.