The
U.N. Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said more than 550 shelters home to
around 3,500 people were either totally or partially destroyed
in the blaze, as well as 150 shops and a facility belonging to a
non-profit organization.
Photographs and video provided to Reuters by a Rohingya refugee
in Nayapara Camp showed families including children, sifting
through charred corrugated iron sheets to see if they could
salvage anything from their still smouldering homes. But little
remained of the camp, which had stood for decades, aside from
concrete poles and the husks of a few trees.
"E block is completely burned down," said the refugee, Mohammed
Arakani. "There is nothing left. There was nothing saved.
Everything is burned down."
"Everyone is crying," he said. "They lost all their belongings.
They lost everything, completely burned down, they lost all
their goods."
UNHCR said it was providing shelter, materials, winter clothes,
hot meals, and medical care for the refugees displaced from the
camp in the Cox's Bazar district, a sliver of land bordering
Myanmar in southeastern Bangladesh.
"Security experts are liaising with the authorities to
investigate on the cause of fire," the agency said, adding that
no casualties were reported.
Onno van Manen, Save the Children's Country Director in
Bangladesh, called the fire "another devastating blow for the
Rohingya people who have endured unspeakable hardship for
years".
Mohammed Shamsud Douza, the deputy Bangladesh government
official in charge of refugees, said the fire service spent two
hours putting out the blaze, but was hampered by the explosion
of gas cylinders inside homes.
The Bangladesh government has moved several thousand Rohingya to
a remote island in recent weeks, despite protests from human
rights groups who say some of the relocations were forced,
allegations denied by authorities.
More than a million Rohingya live in the mainland camps in
southern Bangladesh, the vast majority having fled Myanmar in
2017 from a military-led crackdown that U.N investigators said
was executed with "genocidal intent", charges Myanmar denies.
The fire destroyed part of a camp inhabited by Rohingya who fled
Myanmar after an earlier military campaign, according to
refugees.
(Reporting by Poppy Elena McPherson and Ruma Paul; Editing by
Simon Cameron-Moore)
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