Turkish medical students help Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
A Turkish volunteer examines a patient in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 24, 2022. (AA PHOTO)

A group of Turkish medical students, part of a globe- trotting humanitarian outreach program organized by Türkiye's development aid agency TİKA, extended a helping hand to Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh



A volunteer team of medical and nursing students from different Turkish universities recently ran health checks for Rohingya patients in Bangladesh's refugee camps.

The team visited Bangladesh as part of the 2022 Experience Sharing Program organized by the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA). The team members carried out health camping, examinations, and awareness-raising activities at the Turkish Field Hospital in Balukhali Refugee Camp in the border district of Cox's Bazar, the TİKA's Dhaka office said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

They distributed 1,000 hygiene kits containing three liters of liquid hand soap, liquid dishwashing and laundry detergent produced by the Turkish Diyanet Foundation in the Rohingya camps. As part of the environmental awareness campaign, they also planted 200 fruit trees at suitable locations in the world's largest refugee camp, home to over 1.2 million Rohingya, most of whom fled a brutal military crackdown in Myanmar's Rakhine state in August 2017.

The Turkish Field Hospital is one of the largest health care facilities in the camps, serving over 1,000 Rohingya Muslims daily. It employs nearly 30 Turkish staff, as well as many Bangladeshis and Rohingya, and provides all of its services for free.

Students who had the opportunity to perform health screening, examination, and observation at the Turkish Field Hospital affiliated with the Ministry of Health also conducted hygiene and health awareness activities for 250 women at the hospital and distributed hygiene packages provided by TIKA as gifts to the participants. They also participated in cleaning activities with the children of the region on Cox's Bazar beach, the longest uninterrupted sea beach in the region. Turkish volunteer students later visited the Turkish Embassy in Dhaka, the TIKA Dhaka Program Coordination Office, and the Turkish Airlines Dhaka Office as part of the program. They also visited Lalbagh Fort, Baitul Mukarram National Mosque, Hazrat Hazi Khawja Shahbaz Khan Mosque, Gurudwara Nanak Shahi, Dhakeshwari Mandir, Curzon Hall in Dhaka province, and World Peace Pagoda and Shalban Bihar in Bangladesh's Comilla Province. They also visited many historical and cultural sites in Chittagong province, including Bhatiary Lake, the Bayezid-i Bestami Shrine, and the Bangladesh Betar Museum.

Dengue risk

Rohingya refugees in congested refugee camps nowadays face risk from dengue fever, a virus spread by mosquitoes. Health experts say these camps have become a breeding ground for dengue mosquitos that are different from ordinary mosquitoes in both shape and color.

An average of seven to eight people live in a 120-square-foot room in a house with a poor sewer system, making the camp a breeding ground for mosquitos, particularly those carrying the dengue virus. Dengue fever outbreaks are common during the rainy season in many places across the country, notably Dhaka and Cox's Bazar, due to humid conditions.

According to the Health Ministry data, nearly 10,000 Rohingya were infected with the dengue virus until mid-August of this year, with seven deaths. This disease killed 105 people last year and infected 28,429 more. Ansar Ali, a Rohingya community leader, is concerned about the spread of dengue fever in his two-bed house with nine other people after his younger brother became infected with the virus and is treated at a refugee hospital. "I share a room with my five-member family, while my brother shares a room with four other refugees. We are all worried about contracting dengue and other infections as we cannot maintain privacy and hygiene in such crowded living conditions," he told Anadolu Agency (AA)

Refugees attributed the situation to the unsanitary surroundings and poor waste management in the camps. Khin Maung, a member of the persecuted Rohingya living in Camp-13, told AA that they are frightened over the rise in dengue cases. "Waste and garbage are strewn throughout the camps, and waterlogging has grown common as a result of poor waste management and drainage systems. The situation worsens during the rainy season," the refugee explained. "There are hospitals in and out of the refugee camps," he said, claiming, "but these are insufficient to manage the rising number of dengue patients."

A mosquito naturally bites one person and transmits the dengue virus to others, according to health experts, who, along with rights groups, have urged coordinated efforts to bring the situation under control.

Rezaul Karim Chowdhury, head of Coastal Association for Social Transformation Trust (COAST), a non-profit organization that works for the Rohingya, said that Cox's Bazar city has become one of the most polluted areas in the country, posing serious health risks to its residents. And the refugee camps in the area are the worst of it, he added.

The government has begun dozens of development projects in the tourist hub of Cox's Bazar, many of which generate environmental pollution. "Some old canals that are crucial for normal water flow during the rainy season have been acquired for road construction. Pollution and destruction of water bodies have caused waterlogging in Cox's Bazar, posing a potential threat of dengue breeding," he explained.

Some health experts say the origin and prevalence of dengue fever are increasing due to accumulated water in various areas of the camp and that collective efforts are required to bring the situation under control. Chowdhury said they have repeatedly urged the relevant authorities to ban the use of plastic and to develop waste-to-energy mechanisms in refugee camps. He did, however, emphasize that refugee health care facilities are good, citing COVID-19 as an example, which he believes is less common among refugees than their vast population. Dr. Abu Toha, a chief health coordinator at the office of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner (RRRC), said that the dengue infection rate is not alarming given the large number of refugees in the congested camps. He did, however, admit that the living conditions in so many tents are unclean, which is one of the reasons dengue mosquitos breed. The prevalence of skin diseases in refugee camps has also been exacerbated by overcrowding, he added. However, medical care is provided to refugees in collaboration with the government, U.N. agencies, and international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), including the Turkish hospital and health support.

The UNHCR has recently set up an ICU-bed hospital for refugees. The health and sanitation staff are working hard to keep the camps clean. "I have worked in various refugee camps across the world, and what I am seeing in Bangladesh is far better than what I have seen in other places," Dr. Toha asserted.