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Waste management facility in Rohingya camps to reduce health risk: UNHCR

February 03, 2019 00:00:00


The ability to treat large volumes of waste on site in Rohingya camps, rather than having to transport it elsewhere, is a critical step to safe and sustainable disposal of such waste in emergency situations, says UNHCR.

"This will significantly reduce health risks for refugees and host communities and the likelihood of the outbreak of disease," said UNHCR spokesperson Andrej Mahecic at a press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva on Friday.

UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, and Oxfam have together put into service this week in Cox's Bazar the biggest human waste treatment facility ever built in a refugee settlement, said the spokesperson.

The facility, funded by UNHCR, can process the waste of 150,000 people - 40 cubic metres a day.

To put this in context, it is roughly the equivalent of that needed for a population the size of Dijon in France, Savannah in the USA or, in Switzerland the City of Bern.

Close to a million Rohingya live in a complex of settlements in the Cox's Bazar area.

Kutupalong, the largest refugee settlement in the world, is home to more than 630,000 refugees and managing the waste in this terrain requires innovative approaches.

The speed and scope of the refugee crisis which began in August 2017 meant that most of refugee sites grew spontaneously, resulting in limited available land suitable for latrine pits and waste water treatment.

For example, more than 200,000 cases of acute diarrhoea were reported in the Rohingya camps in 2018, as well as respiratory infections and skin diseases like scabies - all common in settings where sanitation and hygiene are challenges, said Mahecic.

Bangladeshi authorities provided the site for the facility and the project was delivered in collaboration with the government's Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner's Office in Cox's Bazar.


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