UN urges for urgent funding to avoid food ration cuts for Rohingya refugees

Last updated on February 20th, 2023 at 05:40 am

A growing number of experts are raising concerns over the UN’s decision to cut food rations for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, warning about catastrophic consequences.

The Asian country is home to over 1.2 million Rohingya Muslims, the majority of whom fled violence and persecution in Myanmar during a brutal military crackdown in 2017.

Despite immediate appeals for donations by the UN World Food Programme Rohingya Refugee Response, foreign aid for the group has been depleting since 2020. The World Food Programme (WFP) said it urgently requires $125 million to avert ration cuts and has warned about reducing the value of its food assistance by 17% starting March, from $12 per person to $10.

The UN body has also cautioned against another round of deeper reductions, if no new funding commitments are made by April.

The ration cuts ahead of Ramadan are expected to turn food insecurity and child malnutrition in Bangladesh’s Rohingya camps – which are already the largest refugee settlement in the world – into a much bigger crisis, triggering serious health problems and affecting children’s growth and life expectancy.

“The Rohingya, survivors of genocidal attacks by the Myanmar military, are now further victimised by the failure of the international community to ensure their basic right to food,” two UN special rapporteurs, Michael Fakhri and Thomas Andrews, said in a Human Rights Council report.

Bangladesh is not a signatory to the 1951 UN Refugee Convention. The Rohingya refugee population in the country cannot be legally employed to earn their livelihood, and even cannot freely leave their camps to work with the local community towards any business activity.

The group is heavily dependent on aid, and if it is lacking, more of them will try to move to other places in Bangladesh, which may affect the security situation and trigger social problems. “The Rohingya are not acquainted with the social system of Bangladesh and vice versa,” said Mohammed Nur Khan, renowned Bangladeshi rights activist and migration expert.

Read More:- Major Updates: Death toll tops 45,000, three rescued after 11 days under Turkey rubble

AP Journalist

Keeping all readers updated about the recent developments in the Asia Pacific region. I am an avid reader and an inquisitive mind. Follow for all that’s new in the region.

Recent Posts

New ‘Fast-Spread’ Norovirus Strain Sparks Panic on Evacuated Tenerife Cruise Beyond Hantavirus Fears

What began as a frightening hantavirus scare aboard a Tenerife-bound cruise has now escalated into something even more unsettling. Health… Read More

May 13, 2026

Android 17 and Googlebook Signal: Google’s Biggest Laptop Gamble Yet

Google may have just made its boldest move in personal computing since the launch of Chromebooks more than a decade… Read More

May 13, 2026

Cannes 2026 Bans ‘Naked Dresses’: New Red Carpet Rules Leave Celebrities Rethinking Their Looks

The red carpet at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival looks noticeably different this year, and not just because of the… Read More

May 13, 2026

Meta’s New AI Glasses Explained: Why Millions Are Buying Them and Which Model You Should Choose

Meta’s AI-powered glasses have rapidly gone from a futuristic experiment to one of the hottest tech products in the world.… Read More

May 13, 2026

LA, Toronto, and Vancouver Face Tough Questions Ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026

The countdown to the FIFA World Cup 2026 has officially begun, but not every host city is entering the tournament… Read More

May 13, 2026

Top 5 Most Anticipated Films From the 2026 Cannes Film Festival (And Where You Can Watch Them)

The 79th edition of the Cannes Film Festival has officially begun, and the conversation around this year’s lineup is already… Read More

May 13, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More