UNICEF: 200,000 Rohingya refugee children suffering from water-borne diseases

Children are at the heart of the Rohingya refugee crisis, according to a top UNICEF Bangladesh official. (AN photo)
Updated 16 September 2017
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UNICEF: 200,000 Rohingya refugee children suffering from water-borne diseases

DHAKA: More than 200,000 Rohingya refugee children are suffering from diarrhea, pneumonia and other water-borne diseases, said UNICEF Bangladesh.

“After such a long and challenging journey (from Myanmar), many children are sick and they need health care right away. They’re traumatized, and need protection and psychological support,” said the head of child protection at UNICEF Bangladesh, Jean Lieby.
“Many babies were born after their mother’s arrival in Bangladesh. This is a growing humanitarian crisis, and children are at the heart of it; 60 percent of the refugees are children.”
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and the Bangladeshi government have launched mobile medical units for Rohingya camps to address basic health care needs.
“We’re a group of 12 doctors working at Kutupalang camp for the last four days,” said Dr. Mizanur Rahman Apu, a physician working under the Bangladeshi Health Ministry.

Advanced treatment
“We’re treating children for dehydration, fever and other water-borne diseases. In critical cases, we refer them to local health complexes, satellite clinics and other medical institutes, where they’ll get advanced treatment. Here we’re trying to address basic lifesaving requirements.”
Abul Hashem, a coordinator at Kutupalang camp, said: “Thousands of Rohingya are in dire need of medical assistance. MSF and Bangladeshi doctors are trying their best, but demand is so high they can’t cope.”
He added: “Demand is increasing every day. Every day there’s news of children and elderly refugees dying in different camps.”
He said he buried four children in the last two days, all of whom died from diarrhea and fever.
The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) said 13 percent of Rohingya women fleeing violence in Myanmar are either pregnant or lactating mothers in need of lifesaving supplies and health care services for new-borns.
“Women don’t stop getting pregnant or having babies just because an emergency hits,” said Iori Kato, acting representative of the UNFPA Bangladesh.


Explosion at US embassy in Oslo, no injuries: police

Updated 08 March 2026
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Explosion at US embassy in Oslo, no injuries: police

OSLO, Norway: Norwegian police reported on Sunday an explosion at the US embassy in the capital Oslo, but said there were no casualties.
The explosion occurred around 1:00 am local time (0000 GMT), the Oslo police department said in a statement, adding they did not know the cause of the blast.
Public broadcaster NRK quoted police incident commander Michael Dellemyr saying the blast hit the entrance of the embassy’s consular section.
“At around 1:00 am we received several reports of an explosion. We arrived shortly afterward and confirmed that there had been an explosion that hit the US embassy,” he told NRK.
“There is minor damage,” he said.
“We are not going to comment on anything related to the type of damage, what it is that has exploded and similar details, beyond the fact that there has been an explosion” because “it is very early in the investigation,” he said.
The police statement said investigators were in contact with the embassy about the incident and there was a huge police deployment on site.
Residents near the embassy said they heard a loud blast.
A 16-year-old identified only as Edvard told TV2 that he was watching television when he heard the blast.
“My mother and I first thought it came from our house so we looked around a little, but then we saw the flashing lights outside the window and a ton of police,” he said.
“There were police dogs and drones and police with automatic weapons and helicopters in the air,” he said.
US embassies have been placed on high alert in the Middle East over American military operations in Iran and several have faced attacks as Tehran hits back at industrial and diplomatic targets.
But police gave no indication the incident near the embassy in Oslo was connected to the conflict.