Food shortage dampens Ramadan spirit in Rohingya refugee camps

In this photo published by the UN Refugee Agency in July 2023, a Rohingya family shares a meal at a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. (UNHCR)
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Updated 20 March 2024
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Food shortage dampens Ramadan spirit in Rohingya refugee camps

  • Refugee commissioner says situation similar to the emergency in 2017-18
  • Current monthly assistance from World Food Program is $10 per person

Dhaka: This year’s fasting month has started as the worst one in memory for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, with the Ramadan spirit of charity and caring dampened by shortages of aid and food.

International aid for the Rohingya has been dropping since 2020, despite urgent pleas for donations by the World Food Program and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

More than a million Rohingya Muslims, most of whom fled Myanmar after a brutal military crackdown in 2017, have sought shelter in neighboring Bangladesh. The UN estimates that 95 percent of them are dependent on humanitarian assistance, which has been dropping since 2020, despite urgent pleas for donations by the World Food Program and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

With no major international response, the WFP last year began to reduce the value of food aid for the Rohingya, deepening food insecurity and child malnutrition in the squalid camps of Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh’s south, which are already the world’s largest refugee settlement.

Last year’s food cuts coincided with the month of Ramadan, but at the time international NGOs stepped in with support. This year, even that aid is dwindling.

“The flow of food aid is much less compared with last year’s Ramadan,” Mizanur Rahman, Bangladesh’s refugee relief and repatriation commissioner, told Arab News on Wednesday.

“Amid food budget cuts, the nutrition of Rohingya has become low, which is very risky. Their nutrition situation is close to the emergency situation when the exodus (from Myanmar) took place in 2017-18.”

The current monthly food assistance is $10 per person — not enough for the refugees to support themselves, let alone engage in helping others.

Zahida Begum, who has six children to feed, considers herself lucky as her husband works part-time as a carpenter and sometimes manages to earn $5 a day.

From time to time, this allows her to afford fish for the morning sahoor meal before fasting.

“Compared with my neighbors, I am a bit better off this Ramadan, as my husband earns a bit,” she said. “But when the neighbors go to bed with an empty or half-empty stomach, how can I observe the holy month with a peaceful mind?”

Neither she nor her neighbors in Cox’s Bazar have received Ramadan aid from charities this year.

Mohammad Jamal, who looks after a family of five, said food aid cuts have been aggravated by high inflation and price hikes.

“The situation is worse than in the previous year,” he told Arab News. “The prices of vegetables have increased in the market, and we are not able to even buy vegetables this Ramadan. Buying fish, chicken and beef is completely a luxury for the Rohingya at Cox’s Bazar.”

While last year he could still afford to buy puffed rice, watermelon or bananas for iftar, this time they are too expensive.

“Last year, watermelon was sold at 50 taka (50 US cents), this year it’s sold at 250 taka. A banana cost 5 taka last year, but this year, the price has almost doubled.”

Mohammed Rezuwan Khan, a Rohingya activist, estimated that only about a fifth of the families living in Kutupalong, the largest refugee camp, have received food packages from Islamic organizations — much fewer than last year.

“This year, it’s a bit different than in the previous years,” he said.

“As we are Muslims, it is obligatory for us to observe Ramadan, and we’re observing it in the camps despite the obstacles. But in this situation, it’s very miserable now.”

 


Mexico’s Sheinbaum to hold a support rally following major protests

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Mexico’s Sheinbaum to hold a support rally following major protests

MEXICO CITY: Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has organized a large rally in the country’s capital on Saturday to shore up her support following a month of political pushback and major protests.
The killing of Mayor Carlos Manzo in restive Michoacan state had sparked two days of demonstrations in November with protesters setting fire to public buildings.
Just weeks later, thousands marched through the streets of Mexico City to protest drug violence and the government’s security policies. That was followed by the abrupt departure of the country’s attorney general, Alejandro Gertz, in December over reported disagreements with Sheinbaum’s administration on crime policy.
Sheinbaum called for supporters to gather in the capital on the weekend in what analysts said was an attempt to demonstrate her support in the face of growing scrutiny.
“We close this 2025 with the historic celebration of seven years of transformation,” Sheinbaum said in a post on X.
Sheinbaum took office in 2024, following the six-year tenure of her predecessor Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, with both leaders representing the left-wing Morena party.
“Let us together defend the people’s achievements ... in the Zocalo of Mexico City,” Sheinbaum added, referring to the capital’s main public square where weeks ago protesters criticizing her government’s security policies had clashed with police.
Though Sheinbaum has seen high approval ratings in her first year of power, they dipped slightly in recent months, easing from 74 percent in October to 71 percent at the start of December, according to the Polls MX survey summary.

- ‘Reshape the narrative’ -

Analysts told AFP the president not only faces scrutiny from her political opponents and members of the public, but from within her own party.
This gathering in the Zocalo, the country’s main square, is an “attempt at internal support, to reshape the narrative, to call for unity,” said political analyst Pablo Majluf.
Political columnist Hernan Gomez Bruera told AFP that Sheinbaum is “an incredibly efficient president” who likes to be in control and demands a lot from her team. But she is also “very thin-skinned” and “has difficulty dealing with dissent,” he added.
Despite a slight slip in poll numbers over the past few months, the leftist leader, who is Mexico’s first woman president, is still benefiting from a decline in poverty levels that began under her predecessor.
Sheinbaum has also won praise among her supporters for keeping at bay US President Donald Trump’s threats of high trade tariffs and military action on Mexican soil against drug cartels.
Sheinbaum met with Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney in Washington on Friday to discuss trade on the sidelines of the draw for the 2026 World Cup, which will be co-hosted by all three countries. She said on X following the meeting that the three nations maintain a “very good relationship.”