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Thousands of Rohingya children in Bangladesh without parents

Thousands of Rohingya children in Bangladesh without parents

There are no parents or relatives with more than thirty-three hundreds Rohingya children
UNICEF, an UN agency, says that at least 1,300 children among Rohingya who have fled to Myanmar's Rakhine persecution have been identified so far, who have come to Bangladesh without their parents or relatives.

Help firms think both of their parents or their parents have been killed in Myanmar.
The number of Rohingya who came from the third week of August in front of the terrible persecution of the Myanmar army has reached four lakhs a few days ago.

According to the International Immigration Agency and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, every day, an average of ten to fifteen Rohingyas are coming to Bangladesh, with a large part of them being children.

Now the United Nations says that as aid agencies working in Cox's Bazar, more than 1,300 children have been identified who have come to Bangladesh without parents or relatives.

Madhuri Banerjee, an UNICEF official, says, "So far 1312 children have been found in isolated conditions ie parents or relatives, we are trying to help them. They are trying to come out of mental or trauma and it is trying to normalize."

The UNICEF official says these children are not familiar with themselves or if they have not joined any other family in Bangladesh. So they are trying to help them there.

Line of Rohingya children for medical examination in Jaliphali refugee camp
Mohammad Nour, a Rohingya refugee from Myanmar, came to Bangladesh long ago. He says the parents of these children have killed Myanmar soldiers.
According to the estimates of national and international organizations, the number of newborn babies is more than two lakhs.

Acting chairman of a local union council, Nurul Absar Chowdhury says that he has no parents with almost half of the children he comes to.

"At least 40 percent are coming withou the guardian, but some are coming only with mother or grandmother," he says.

Selim Mahmud of Cox's Bazar Red Crescent says many Rohingya women who come to Bangladesh have told them that they have brought together many children whose family members did not find them while they were coming.

Representatives of aid organizations say that in this period many children who came in contact with others without family were found who were only three or four years old.
For good reason, the fate of the children of these children is not exactly what they have been or those who came to Bangladesh with them.

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