By Panu Wongcha-umBANGKOK (Reuters) - The United Nations refugee agency on Tuesday urged the international community to keep focus on the plight of the Rohingya refugees amid a funding crunch and the lack of long-term solution for their safe return to Myanmar.
Nearly one million Rohingya Muslims fled a military-led crackdown in Buddhist-majority Myanmar in 2017 and are now living in camps in Bangladesh in what U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi described as "the biggest humanitarian refugee camp in the world".
"This decline in humanitarian assistance makes it more difficult to continuously, for example, renew the shelters," Grandi said.
Grandi praised Bangladesh for "miraculous" works in maintaining the Rohingya camps, allowing education for the Rohingya children, and said that the United Nations is currently discussing with Bangladesh on allowing refugees to work to support their livelihood in the camps.
"People are suffering in Myanmar a lot, not just the Rohingya, and they deserve a better future."
Persons:
Panu, Filippo Grandi, Grandi, Angus MacSwan
Organizations:
United Nations, Reuters, Global, Forum, UNHCR
Locations:
BANGKOK, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bangkok, United