Donors pledge $344m in Rohingya aid
The international donor community has announced pledges for more than US$344 million to urgently ramp up the delivery of critical humanitarian assistance to Rohingyas and host communities in Bangladesh, an UNHCR release said.
Funding was also pledged for the humanitarian response inside Myanmar where violence, insecurity and growing humanitarian needs have sent nearly 600,000 Rohingyas from the northern Rakhine state into Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh since August 25.
“Humanitarian donors have today expressed their solidarity and compassion with the families and communities in need. These very generous pledges must now quickly translate into life-saving relief for the vulnerable Rohingyas and support to host communities who have been stretched to the limit,” said Mark Lowcock, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator on Monday.
Thirty five pledges were made at the conference in Geneva yesterday which was co-organised by the UN Migration Agency (IOM), the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and with Kuwait and the European Union as co-hosts.
“More than 800,000 stateless Rohingyas in Bangladesh aspire to a life that meets their immediate needs for food, medicine, water, and shelter. But beyond that, a life that has hope for the future where their identity is recognised, they are free from discrimination, and are able to return safely to their homes in Myanmar. As we come together in solidarity, I want to thank Bangladesh and its Rohingya hosting communities and the donors for supporting them,” said UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi.
The government of Bangladesh, local charities and volunteers, the UN and NGOs have been working around the clock in recent weeks to help the stateless Rohingyas who depend on humanitarian assistance for food, water, shelter, health services and other essentials.
The UN and partners have launched a response plan for six months (Sept 2017 - Feb 2018) to meet the needs of a combined 1.2 million newly arrived and existing Rohingyas and their Bangladeshi hosts. The appeal requests $434 million, and pledges made yesterday will increase the funding level of this plan.
“Today's pledges from the international community will help rebuild Rohingyas lives. Without these vital funds, humanitarians would not be able to continue providing protection and life-saving aid to one of the most vulnerable groups in the world. While we are thankful, I hope that the end of this conference does not mean the end of new funding commitments. We have not reached our target and each percentage point we are under means thousands without food, healthcare and shelter,” said William Lacy Swing, UN Migration Director General.
Conference participants stressed that the international community must help bring a peaceful solution to the plight of the Rohingya and ensure conditions that will allow for their eventual voluntary return in safety and dignity. The origins and the solutions to the crisis lie in Myanmar.
“The mere convening of this humanitarian conference is a message of hope sent to the Rohingyas and their host communities in the friendly Republic of Bangladesh, reaffirming that the international community stands by them and supports them in their humanitarian plight,” said Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the State of Kuwait, Khaled Al-Jarallah.
“Today, we stand united for the right cause,” said EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management, Christos Stylianides.
“The cause of stateless people who have suffered for too long: the Rohingya. The Rohingya deserve nothing less than every other human being in the world. They deserve a future. We have a moral duty to give these people hope,” he added.
Source: BSS