• বাংলা |
  • English |
  • عربي
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Rohingya Press – Truth. Voice. Resistance
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Daily Publications
  • History
  • OP-ED
    • Opinion & Editorials
    • Letters from Exile
    • Interviews
  • Reports
    • UN & NGO Reports
    • Legal & Policy Briefs
    • Academic Research
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Note to Our Readers
  • Home
  • Daily Publications
  • History
  • OP-ED
    • Opinion & Editorials
    • Letters from Exile
    • Interviews
  • Reports
    • UN & NGO Reports
    • Legal & Policy Briefs
    • Academic Research
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Note to Our Readers
No Result
View All Result
Rohingya Press
No Result
View All Result
Home Reports

Half a million Rohingya children face crisis as aid dries up and violence escalates

Format News and Press Release SourceWorld Vision Posted25 Aug 2025 Originally published25 Aug 2025

August 25, 2025
in Reports
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
0
Bangladesh leader Yunus presents 7-point plan to resolve Rohingya crisis
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS

Malnutrition has surged by 27% with families surviving on less than 1,000 calories a day, and children’s bodies are wasting before our eyes.

Essential services are collapsing, health clinics and schools are shutting down, while access to clean water and sanitation is shrinking. Deadly disease outbreaks are becoming inevitable.

READ ALSO

Companies Built Bases On Rohingya Land After They Fled Myanmar Security Forces: UN Report

Aid alone is not enough for the Rohingya

A generation is growing up without education, jobs, or hope — pushing families toward desperate choices like early marriage and unsafe migration.

Cox’s Bazaar, Bangladesh, 25 August 2025 — The world’s largest refugee settlement is facing a humanitarian crisis, with severe funding cuts, compounded by a new influx of refugees fleeing violence and hunger, which has pushed the humanitarian response to its breaking point.

World Vision and other humanitarian organisations on the ground report that a fresh wave of violence in Myanmar has forced approximately 160,000 new refugees into the camps since late 2024, overwhelming an already strained system. Amidst conflict, climate extremes, and economic shocks, more than 1.1 million people, including around 500,000 children, are desperately living in refugee settlements and facing critical shortages of food, clean water, shelter, escalating risks of disease and exploitation. The crisis is a direct result of critical funding shortfalls; the Joint Response Plan has received only 36% of its USD 934 million target, forcing aid agencies to scale back life-saving services for the camps’ youngest residents.

Suresh Bartlett, World Vision Bangladesh National Director, shares, “For eight years since fleeing Myanmar, the Rohingya in Cox’s Bazar have shown remarkable resilience in the face of unimaginable hardship. Today, a dangerous convergence of escalating violence, critical aid cuts, and deepening hunger threatens to extinguish the last flickers of hope for over half a million children. Their prolonged suffering calls for urgent, sustained international support

Eight years into the Rohingya crisis, World Vision’s Bangladesh Rohingya Crisis Response (BRCR) has supported over 418,000 people, including more than 247,000 children across 19 locations, delivering integrated assistance in food security, health, education, protection, and livelihoods to restore dignity and build long-term resilience.

The needs are overwhelming, but World Vision, together with its partners, is working with the refugees and host communities to intensify local action and innovative solutions designed to build a more hopeful future.

Md. Mofizur Rahman, World Vision BRCR Deputy Response Director, shares, “Despite the challenges, the resilience of the Rohingya community is truly inspiring. Our circular economy initiatives are not just processing waste; they’re creating green jobs, providing vital resources like clean water, and restoring dignity. These innovations show what’s possible, but they require significant investment to scale and truly avert a full-scale catastrophe.”

World Vision’s green humanitarian response in Rohingya camps is transforming over 2,200 tons of monthly waste into resources through circular economy approaches. More than waste management, it’s creating vital green jobs and sustainable livelihoods. Initiatives include solar-powered water networks producing 600,000 litres daily for 38,000 people, composting for community gardens, tree planting, solar energy maintenance, and upcycling waste into crafts. These efforts safeguard health and the environment while empowering hundreds with new skills, livelihood, and income.

World Vision is grateful to partners such as WFP, UNICEF, IOM, KOICA, and Education Cannot Wait. Their unwavering support has helped provide critical services for hundreds of thousands of vulnerable children and families.

Cherian Thomas, World Vision South Asia and Pacific Regional Leader, shares, “This crisis is a profound test of global solidarity. As new waves of refugees continue to arrive, the drastic funding shortfalls are limiting our ability to provide children and communities with the most basic, life-saving services. We urgently call on the international community to step up — not just with funds, but with bold action and long-term vision. ”

Ends –

Source: reliefweb.int
Tags: Rohingya childrenRohingya crisisWorld Vision

Related Posts

Missing From a U.N. Meeting on Helping Refugees? The Refugees.
Arakan

Companies Built Bases On Rohingya Land After They Fled Myanmar Security Forces: UN Report

September 29, 2025
Myanmar Risks Repeating History With the Arakan Army
Human Rights

Aid alone is not enough for the Rohingya

September 26, 2025
One million Syrian refugees returned home since al-Assad’s fall, UN says
Repatriation

UN report: Political resolution crucial for Rohingya repatriation

September 25, 2025
Rohingyas: Indigenous to Arakan, not to Bangladesh – by HRM Rokan Uddin
Arakan

AA Chief Accuses Bangladesh Officials of Inciting Rohingya Insurgent Attacks

September 24, 2025
Rohingya rights: Situation worsened in Myanmar since 2023
Reports

Rohingya rights: Situation worsened in Myanmar since 2023

September 3, 2025
How Rare Minerals Are Reshaping Geopolitics
Reports

Myanmar: Death, destruction and desperation mirror 2017 atrocities – UN report

September 2, 2025
Next Post
Bangladesh leader Yunus presents 7-point plan to resolve Rohingya crisis

Rohingya refugees observe genocide day, seek global support for safe repatriation

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EDITOR'S PICK

This handout, taken and released by the Royal Malaysia Police on April 20, 2022, shows Rohingya refugees, who had escaped from Malaysian Immigration's temporary Sungai Bakap depot, detained on the side of a highway in Penang. Hundreds of Rohingya migrants from Myanmar escaped a detention centre in Malaysia on April 20 after a riot broke out, with six killed on a highway as they fled, authorities said. (Photo by Handout / ROYAL MALAYSIA POLICE / AFP) /

Rights groups urge Malaysia to recognize Myanmar refugees

June 26, 2025

Amnesty urges India to halt deportations and protect Rohingya refugees

July 1, 2025

Rohingya repatriation efforts stall amid lack of progress

August 4, 2025
India's largest detention centre in Assam's Matia. Credit: Rokibuz Zaman.

How Rohingyas were expelled from Assam detention centre, despite their pleas pending in court

May 22, 2025

POPULAR NEWS

Japan provides $3.4m to WFP for Rohingya, host communities

BGB rejects ULA allegations of links with Rohingya armed groups

September 30, 2025
Japan provides $3.4m to WFP for Rohingya, host communities

The Rohingya people don’t need more aid. They just need to return home

September 30, 2025
Japan provides $3.4m to WFP for Rohingya, host communities

Is UN Conference on Rohingya Repatriation a Turning Point for Geopolitics? – Mujtoba Ahmed Murshed

September 30, 2025
Japan provides $3.4m to WFP for Rohingya, host communities

Bangladesh, ADB sign $334m deals for power, water, Rohingya support

September 30, 2025
Japan provides $3.4m to WFP for Rohingya, host communities

Japan provides $3.4m to WFP for Rohingya, host communities

September 30, 2025

About RohingyaPress

Rohingya Press is committed to amplifying the voices of the Rohingya people by delivering accurate, timely, and unbiased news.

Follow us

Categories

  • Analysis
  • Arakan
  • Burma
  • Burma Election
  • Conference
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Health
  • History
  • Human Rights
  • Interview
  • Investigations
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Refugee Camps
  • Refugees
  • Repatriation
  • Reports
  • Statements
  • World News

Latest News

  • BGB rejects ULA allegations of links with Rohingya armed groups
  • The Rohingya people don’t need more aid. They just need to return home
  • Is UN Conference on Rohingya Repatriation a Turning Point for Geopolitics? – Mujtoba Ahmed Murshed
  • Bangladesh, ADB sign $334m deals for power, water, Rohingya support
October 2025
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Sep    
  • বাংলা
  • عربي
  • English
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Fair Use Notice
  • Note to Our Readers

© 2025 RohingyaPress News - published by ITM Ex-Forum.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Refugees
  • Burma
  • Arakan
  • Economy
  • World News
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion

© 2025 RohingyaPress News - published by ITM Ex-Forum.