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Members of the Rohingya delegation were impressed by Bhasanchar’s infrastructure and general environment. A 40-member Rohingya delegation is currently in Bhasanchar to study housing projects for Rohingya refugees. Rohingya representatives are monitoring various aspects of housing in Bhasanchar under the supervision of the Department of the Armed Forces.
They arrived in Chittagong from Ukhia on Saturday morning under the supervision of the army. From there he reached Bhasanchar on Saturday night under the supervision of the Navy by sea. Forty Rohingya leaders from 34 camps in Ukhia-Teknaf went to observe the situation and the environment in Bhasanchar. They are scheduled to return on September 6. The government hopes that Rohingya leaders will agree to go to Bhasanchar if they see and persuade others.
Mohammad Harun, a member of the delegation, told Kaler Kantha on his mobile phone at 4.30pm on Sunday that he really liked the housing project in Bhasanchar. In addition to mosques, children’s schools, health centers, playgrounds, there are ponds within each housing project. Aaron said, the water in the pond in the middle of the sea is very delicious. What is beyond your imagination.
Mohammad Harun, a resident of Rohingya Camp 1018 in Ukhia, visited Bhasanchar. The Rohingya delegation member said that most party members like him were satisfied with the environment of the housing project.
The Rohingya delegation that visited Bhasanchar includes heads of different camps, boatmen and mosque imams. After visiting Bhasanchar, they will return to Cox’s Bazar and brief the Rohingya on the situation there.
The Refugee Aid and Repatriation Commissioner (RRRC) said it was an encouraging activity for members of the Rohingya delegation to inspect the housing project in Bhasanchar. Forty people selected from the Rohingya refugee camp have been sent here to report on the housing project in Bhasanchar. Members of the delegation will visit the Bhasanchar Housing Project on site and be briefed on the various facilities available there. The government hopes that Rohingya leaders will agree to go to Bhasanchar if they see and persuade others.
Commodore Mamun, an officer on the naval ship that took the Rohingya delegation from Chittagong to Bhasanchar, said they arrived in Bhasanchar before Saturday night. Since the morning, the members of the delegation toured different points of the housing project. See the rest tomorrow. The Navy officer said there are better facilities here than at Cox’s Bazar. The water of Bhasanchar is extraordinary. It is impossible to imagine such exuberant water.
The government has built a housing project in Bhasanchar, in the Bay of Bengal, at a cost of around Tk 3 billion to accommodate at least 1 lakh of Rohingyas. Around 13 km of flood control dams have been built around the housing project. At the same time, 120 cyclone shelters, the necessary education and medical infrastructure have been built.
But the relocation of the Rohingya from Cox’s Bazar to Bhasanchar has been postponed due to a lack of consent from international aid agencies and the United Nations. The government hopes that international agencies will be partners in relocating the Rohingya to a better and more open place rather than the crowded refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar. The agencies have imposed conditions on the safety and voluntary relocation of Rohingya there.
Today, 303 Rohingya live in Bhasanchar, who have been rescued by law enforcement in the Bay of Bengal while being trafficked to Malaysia by sea at different times. On behalf of the Government of Bangladesh, the Bangladesh Navy is meeting the basic humanitarian needs of these Rohingya, such as food and medical care.
At least one million Rohingya currently live in camps in Cox’s Bazar. They suffer from various diseases in the densely populated camps. Apart from this, various types of criminal gangs rule there due to their homelessness. For these reasons, the Rohingya must be relocated to relatively better housing, the government has said on several occasions.
According to RRRC sources, members of the Rohingya delegation will be dispatched to Bhasanchar at any time if they can persuade other Rohingya in the camp with ideas about Bhasanchar. They will be able to live there much better than Cox’s Bazar.
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