Pelting rain, relocation add to woes in Rohingya Muslim camp

Rohingya refugees shelter under an umbrella during rain in Bangladesh's Balukhali refugee camp. (AFP)
Updated 20 September 2017
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Pelting rain, relocation add to woes in Rohingya Muslim camp

COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh: Monsoon rains, relocations and extortion attempts are worsening the living situation in the Bangladeshi camps for Rohingya Muslims who fled Myanmar.
Several Rohingya camps in this coastal city are flooded from three days of unrelenting rains. People in the camps were being pelted with heavy rain Wednesday while desperately packing their meagre belongings into plastic sacks and bits of clothes and trying to find new shelter
The initial arrivals in the most recent exodus simply settled on whatever patch of land they could find, building shelters of bamboo sticks and plastic sheets.
But as their numbers soared, the local government has started moving them to new areas. Many refused, terrified of being without shelter at all. But the rains washed away shanties or made them uninhabitable.
So they’re moving again.


Central African Republic president seeks third term in election

Updated 7 sec ago
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Central African Republic president seeks third term in election

  • Since Touadera was first elected in 2016, in the middle of a civil war, the CAR has seen unrest ease despite feuds between armed groups and the government in some regions

BANGUI: Voters in the Central African Republic cast their ballots for a new president on Sunday, with incumbent Faustin-Archange Touadera widely expected to win a third term after touting his success in steadying a nation long plagued by conflict.

Around 2.3 million people are eligible to vote, with parliamentary, municipal and regional polls taking place at the same time.

Escorted by members of the presidential guard, Touadera arrived at a high school to cast his own ballot.

He urged people to vote “to allow our country to develop, to allow our country to regain peace and security.”

“It’s a very important issue,” Touadera, 68, told reporters.

Streets in the capital Bangui were quiet, with armored vehicles of the UN peacekeeping mission MINUSCA deployed at road junctions.

Heavy security was posted outside voting stations, and helicopters flew overhead at a school near where Touadera was voting, while a long queue had formed. Since Touadera was first elected in 2016, in the middle of a civil war, the CAR has seen unrest ease despite feuds between armed groups and the government in some regions.

“We need a leader elected by the people, not someone who takes power by force,” teacher Julie Odjoubi, 44, said, her left thumb stained with purple ink to show she had voted.

Touadera is in pole position to win in a seven-strong field, after a new constitution was adopted in 2023.