By Siddique Islam
On Sunday, 1 July 2018
DHAKA - The World Bank (WB) will provide US$480 million
in grant-based support to help Bangladesh address the needs of Rohingya
refugees.
The fund will be used in areas such as health, education,
water and sanitation, disaster risk management and social protection of the
Rohingya refugees, according to a WB statement issued from Washington on June
28.
UN, World Bank chiefs visit Bangladesh on Rohingya crisis https://lnkd.in/dxEXiPi
The World Bank Board of Directors has approved a $50 million additional grant for an existing Health Sector Support Project in Bangladesh which is the first in a series that could total as much as $480 million, it added.
UN, World Bank chiefs visit Bangladesh on Rohingya crisis https://lnkd.in/dxEXiPi
The World Bank Board of Directors has approved a $50 million additional grant for an existing Health Sector Support Project in Bangladesh which is the first in a series that could total as much as $480 million, it added.
The WB also said it will help the Rohingya people receive
maternal, neonatal, and infant, child and adolescent health and nutrition
services, as well as reproductive healthcare and family planning support.
“Bangladesh has shown great leadership in this evolving
humanitarian crisis by providing refuge for the Rohingya people,” World Bank
Group President Jim Yong Kim said in the statement.
This grant allows the World Bank Group, working in
collaboration with the Government of Canada, to support these efforts, he
added.
“We’re deeply moved by the suffering of the Rohingya
people and stand ready to help them until they can return home in a safe,
voluntary, and dignified manner,” the World Bank chief noted.
On the other hand, Finance Minister of Bangladesh AMA
Muhith said: “Bangladesh has sheltered the Rohingya people fleeing from
violence in Myanmar because it is the right thing to do for fellow human
beings. But their needs are enormous and the world needs to step up support.”
He also added: “We’re committed to addressing the basic
needs of these unfortunate refugees.”
World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim along with United
Nations Secretary General António Guterres are set to visit Bangladesh today
for a two-day visit to assess the severity of the crisis and discuss what more
can be done.
They will visit the Rohingya settlements in Cox’s Bazar
and meet with Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina, Finance Minister AMA
Muhith, other senior government officials, and representatives of civil society
and other partners.
Since August 2017, more than 700,000 Rohingya people have
taken shelter in Cox’s Bazar district of Bangladesh, making it the world’s
largest and fastest growing refugee camp.
It is also putting pressure on the environment, existing
infrastructure, and social services that were already constrained, the WB
added.