گرسنگی در کمپ آوارگان مسلمان میانمار در بنگلادش+عکس
شفقناافغانستان- گرسنگی مشکل واحد مسلمانانی است که از کشتار و هتک حرمت در کشورشان میانمار گریخته و به بنگلادش آمدهاند. مسلمانان موسوم به روهینگیا در کمپهای بسیار نامناسب در دستههای بسیار بزرگ روزگار میگذرانند و به نظر میرسد تمام تلاشهای سازمان ملل و گروههای حقوق بشری برای رسیدگی غذایی و دارویی به آنها کفایت نمیکند. این موضوع را میتوان از اندام نحیف و بیجان کودکان مسلمان در این کمپها متوجه شد.
در ادامه به تصاویر منتخب رویترز از گرسنگی در کمپ آوارگان مسلمان در بنگلادش توجه کنید.
A Rohingya refugee child gets an oral cholera vaccine, distributed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) with the help of volunteers and local NGOs, in a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 11, 2017. The WHO began distributing 900,000 doses of cholera vaccine on Tuesday in Bangladesh’s camps for Rohingya refugees fleeing from Myanmar, as authorities rush to prevent a major outbreak of the deadly disease.
REUTERS/Jorge SilvaTemporary healthcare centers, where the oral cholera vaccine provided by the WHO is administered, are seen marked with yellow flags in the Jamtoli refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, October 10, 2017. The cholera vaccination campaign in Bangladesh, the second largest in history, will be crucial to containing any outbreak, said Dr N. Paranietharan, the WHO’s representative in Bangladesh. More than 1,000 people will fan out across the sprawling camps on the southern tip of Bangladesh that are home to more than 519,000 Rohingya Muslims.
REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir HossainBottles with cholera vaccines to be distributed among Rohingya refugees in a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 11, 2017. Doctors in two clinics have told Reuters that there have been several cases of patients with the symptoms of cholera, a virulent diarrhea that kills within 36 hours if not treated.
REUTERS/Jorge SilvaA man who was brought with some injuries and suffering from severe diarrhoea, recovers at a dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International at the Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 6, 2017. “I believe we are facing a tsunami. We just don’t know if it’s going to be 10 feet or 50 feet,” said Bruce Murray, a physician at the clinic. “Cholera is known to be endemic in Bangladesh and now we are bringing in half a million people in squalid conditions and it’s got to be inevitable. It’s a matter of when it hits, rather than if,” he said.
REUTERS/Damir SagoljA child suffering from severe diarrhoea is brought to a dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International at the Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 7, 2017. Murray said there could be “tens of thousands” of victims in an outbreak. Paranietharan said his organization had the capacity to handle 70,000 cholera cases.
REUTERS/Damir SagoljBruce Murray, a physician at the dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International, rests after treating patients suffering from severe diarrhoea at the Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 6, 2017. As well as a handful of clinics, mobile teams are ready to go to inaccessible parts of the camps with oral rehydration salts that can save cholera patients if they can’t get access to intravenous fluids.
REUTERS/Damir SagoljA woman holds her child suffering from severe diarrhoea at a dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International at the Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 7, 2017. REUTERS/Damir SagoljPeople suffering from severe diarrhoea lie in beds as they are treated at a dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International at the Kutupalong Rohingya refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 6, 2017. REUTERS/Damir SagoljA Rohingya refugee child gets an oral cholera vaccine in a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 11, 2017. Aid workers worry they lack the staff to get the vaccines out quickly, while the WHO says it urgently needs $10.2 million to do the job properly. The first round of the vaccination campaign will cover 650,000 people aged one year and older. A second round will target 250,000 children aged between one and five with an additional dose for extra protection.
REUTERS/Jorge SilvaRohingya refugee volunteers line up with numbers to form groups before the cholera vaccine distribution in a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, October 11, 2017. REUTERS/Jorge SilvaRohingya refugees gather in front of a temporary healthcare center to get an oral cholera vaccine in the Jamtoli refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, October 10, 2017. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir HossainA healthcare member applies a gentian violet mark on a Rohingya refugee’s finger after administering cholera vaccine in the Jamtoli refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, October 10, 2017. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir HossainA healthcare member counts the cholera vaccines in the Jamtoli refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, October 10, 2017. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir HossainA woman comforts her husband suffering from severe diarrhoea at a dysentery clinic run by Medical Teams International in Kutupalong camp near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh October 6, 2017. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj