In a statement issued today, Oxfam, Save the Children and World Vision called on international governments to generously fund the 2019 Joint Response Plan (JRP) for the Rohingya Humanitarian Crisis. While the agencies applaud the ambitious new JRP—an appeal for US$ 920.5 million to assist 1.25 million people, including 909,000 Rohingya refugees and 336,000 host community members—they urge donors to emphasize education and income-generating activities when allotting funding.
The three agencies are also calling on donors and the Government of Bangladesh to ensure that humanitarian action in Bangladesh supports refugees and host communities to live in greater safety and dignity, while meeting basic needs for food, clean water and shelter. This means investing in education to equip children and youth with the skills they will need to create a more prosperous future in Myanmar when they can safely return there. It also means enabling refugees to become self-reliant today so they can provide for their families in dignity.
Rachel Wolff, World Vision’s Rohingya Refugee Crisis Response Director, said: “Education is not a luxury. It is a human right. Refugee children and parents tell us that education is a top priority for them. However, there is an overwhelming gap in access for children and adolescents.”
An estimated 700,000 children and youth age 3 to 24, including 200,000 from the host community, lack access to educational services. The situation for refugee adolescents and youth is particularly dire: only four in 100 have access to any form of education or life-skills and vocational training.
Thirteen-year-old refugee, Sirjil, worries that he’ll never go back to school. He says, “I was in fifth grade in Myanmar, but here I have nothing to do. Sometimes I go to the forest to collect firewood. Sometimes I go to the river. There is no opportunity for education. Tutors cost 300 taka a month (about $3.50). How can you pay that if you have no money?”
David Skinner, Team Leader (Designate) of Save the Children’s Rohingya Response said: “The Rohingya children currently in Bangladesh have had their rights abused by being forced to flee their homes in horrific circumstances. They have experienced things that no one—let alone a child—should experience. They should not suffer a double penalty by also being denied their right to education. The least the world can do is to ensure that they are not any more disadvantaged.”
In addition to insufficient access to education, the lack of income-generating opportunities renders Rohingya refugees dependent on aid, making them highly vulnerable to exploitation, especially children.
Dipankar Datta, Oxfam Country Director said: “Rohingya girls, especially when they hit puberty, face major obstacles in getting an education. The lack of options for Rohingya women to find work in the refugee camps makes it very hard for single mothers to support their children. Donors and the Government of Bangladesh should increase opportunities for women and girls to earn and learn, in order to help protect them from abuse and exploitation and be able to provide a better future for their families.”
Oxfam, Save the Children and World Vision are calling on the international community to support the Government of Bangladesh in making education for children and youth a central priority, and to encourage initiatives that promote self-reliance and recovery for their parents.
For more information or to arrange an interview with a spokesperson, please contact:
Save The Children, Veronica Pedrosa, veronica.pedrosa@savethechildren.org, +88 0170 981 7491
Oxfam, Melanie Kramers, mkramers1@oxfam.org, +44 7825 0888
World Vision, Karen Homer, Karen_Homer@wvi.org, +88 0184 726 4883
NOTE TO EDITORS
Oxfam is providing vital aid, including clean water and food, to Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. So far, we’ve reached at least 266,000 people. Oxfam’s report, One year on: time to put women and girls at the heart of the response, found that more than a third of women surveyed by Oxfam and partner agencies said they did not feel safe or comfortable going to collect water or using toilets and shower cubicles. Oxfam is calling for 15 percent of new funds to be allocated specifically for gender sensitivities programming, including providing income-generating activities for women.
Save the Children is one of the leading International NGOs in Cox’s Bazar, having reached more than 700,000 Rohingya and members of the host community since the start of the crisis. Save the Children has more than 1,800 staff and volunteers supporting our programmes in child protection, access to education, health and nutrition, water and sanitation services, as well as distribution of shelter and food items.
World Vision is caring for Rohingya children and their families living across 23 refugee camps and host communities in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. We provide principled, timely protection and assistance that saves lives, alleviates suffering and respects the dignity of people, especially children. To date, we have served more than 280,000 refugees through food distribution, malnutrition-prevention programmes, water and sanitation systems, child protection and more. This month, we will open the first of 21 learning centres for refugee adolescents and youth in partnership with UNICEF. World Vision has worked with communities in Bangladesh since 1972.
Joint Statement from Oxfam, Save the Children and World Vision on the 2019 Joint Response Plan for the Rohingya Humanitarian Crisis
15 February 2019
Eighteen months ago, more than 700,000 people fled violence, persecution and mass human rights violations in Myanmar. The speed and the volume of the influx created an unprecedented protection crisis. Today, almost 1 million Rohingya still languish in the world’s largest refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. More than half of them are women and children.
Today, these families are pinning their hopes on the renewed Joint Response Plan (JRP) for the Rohingya Humanitarian Crisis launched today in Geneva. Every day, families in the camps tell us how they long to return to their homes in Myanmar. But they also say they don’t want to go back until their rights are recognized and until their safety can be assured. So in the meantime, they are counting on this ambitious new funding plan to prioritize education for their children and youth. In the meantime, people also need income-generating opportunities that will help them regain some sense of normality, feed their families better and be less reliant on humanitarian aid.
The Bangladeshi communities living alongside the Rohingya refugees also anticipate the new JRP. In August 2017, the Government of Bangladesh displayed exceptional hospitality in opening its border, as well as the people of Bangladesh who welcomed the Rohingya into their homes. Eighteen months later, their commitment to host almost 1 million refugees continues to place immense pressure on the capacity of host governments and neighbouring families. The unprecedented number of newcomers has affected social, economic and environmental systems in Cox’s Bazar—already one of Bangladesh’s poorest districts—pushing some families further into poverty. The host community’s on-going generosity is particularly laudable as many countries are building barriers to prevent refugees from receiving the assistance they need and the protection guaranteed under international law.
Today, Oxfam, Save the Children and World Vision also applaud the compassion of donor governments who have funded the Rohingya humanitarian response to date. We urge you to respond generously to this appeal for US$920.5 million to assist 1.25 million people, including 909,000 Rohingya refugees and 336,000 host community members.
We also call on donors and the Government of Bangladesh to ensure that humanitarian action in Bangladesh supports communities to live in greater safety and dignity, while continuing to meet refugees’ basic needs for food, clean water and shelter. This means investing in education to equip children and youth with the skills they will need to create a more prosperous future in Myanmar when they can safely return there. It also means enabling refugees to become self-reliant today so they can provide for their families in dignity.
Refugee children and adults tell us that education is a top priority for them. However, 18 months on there is an overwhelming gap in access for children and adolescents. An estimated 700,000 children and youth age 3 to 24, including 200,000 from the host community, lack access to educational services. The situation for refugee adolescents and youth is particularly dire: only four in 100 have access to any form of education or life-skills and vocational training.
Thirteen-year-old refugee, Sirjil, worries that he’ll never go back to school. He says, “I was in fifth grade in Myanmar, but here I have nothing to do. Sometimes I go to the forest to collect firewood. Sometimes I go to the river. There is no opportunity for education. Tutors cost 300 taka a month (about $3.50). How can you pay that if you have no money?”
Without the safety that schooling provides, at least 100,000 Rohingya refugee children in Cox’s Bazar face greater child protection risks, including psychosocial distress, neglect, abuse, separation from caregivers, child marriage, child labour and trafficking. Education also provides a sense of routine and normalcy. We know that the longer children are out of school, the less likely it is that they will be able to return to learning.
Education is not a luxury. It’s a human right. We can’t fail Rohingya children like Sirjil who have already survived so much. More investment in education and protection for children and youth is desperately needed if we are to prevent a lost generation. Without such education, these children will lack the skills they need to cope with their current situation. They will also lack the skills necessary to contribute to their society when they return to Myanmar.
In addition to insufficient access to education, refugees also lack income-generating opportunities in the camps, which puts them at further risk. This is a significant obstacle to their recovery and to the realization of their rights. It renders the Rohingya fully dependent on aid and highly vulnerable to exploitation, especially women and children.
Left with limited safe options, they are at risk of child and forced labour, early marriage, trafficking and prostitution. Young girls sold into forced labour were the largest group of trafficking victims identified by the International Organization for Migration in Bangladesh’s Rohingya refugee camps in 2018.[1] Providing women and girls opportunities to earn an income through formal recognition of activities such as care work could help them to protect themselves from abuse and exploitation now and in the future.
The release of the 2019 Joint Response Plan today marks the mid-point in the second year of this unprecedented, prolonged crisis. Oxfam, Save the Children and World Vision thank the Government of Bangladesh for its continued efforts to protect the Rohingya. We call on the international community to support Bangladesh in making education for children and youth a central priority, and to encourage initiatives that promote self-reliance and recovery for their parents.
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