23 Apr 2018  |   04:44am IST

Rohingyas lose means of livelihood in refugee camp fire

PTI, NEW DELHI: Tasleema does not remember the last time she lived somewhere she could call home.

As she fled Arakan in Myanmar to Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh and finally arrived in New Delhi, Tasleema, a member of the besieged Rohingya community, found that she was always on the move.

A fire in the only Rohingya camp in Delhi has displaced her again.

At least 44 shanties housing Rohingya refugees in southeast Delhi's Sarita Vihar were gutted in a fire early last Sunday. It left 226 Rohingyas, including 100 women and 50 children, homeless once again.

Tasleema, 23, was among the 75,000 Rohingyas, the majority of them Muslims, displaced by two waves of violence between Buddhists and Muslims in Rakhine in 2012. Thousands of people fled Myanmar then to take refuge in neighbouring countries, including India.

"I have been on the move since I was 17. My children have been born as refugees and they are growing up seeing one problem after another," she told PTI.

The fire that broke out because of a short circuit in the electrical wiring system in the camp spread rapidly and razed it to the ground.

No casualties were reported, but the refugees lost all their belongings, including their UNHCR refugee cards which help prevent arbitrary arrests, detention and deportation.

“The fire spread fast as many of our tents had plastic coverings and the houses that had gas cylinders burst, spreading the fire further," Abu Fazal, another resident of the camp, said.

Refugee Amina Begum noted how they had made peace with their situation and were trying to rebuild their lives, but the fire not only destroyed their shanties but also their hope of finally burying the horrors of the past.

"I had bought a sewing machine using which I started making clothes to earn a living but I even lost that machine in the fire. It is like we have been pushed six years back from where we started," Amina, 28, said.

Children in the camp still look for their belongings in the charred debris every day since the fire, she added.

“We are still trying to cope up but what do I tell my children who lost all their toys and school books in the fire?” Amina said through a tattered curtain in a tiny space where she was trying to put her six-month-old baby to bed.

Before the fire, the Rohingya refugees had constructed several brick and mud huts. They are now living under plastic covers. The men sleep outside and the women inside some 20 makeshift tents covered with dupattas, clothes and mosquito nets.

NGOs representatives said the camps lacked basic services such as sanitation, healthcare, education facilities or drinking water and after the fire the living condition in the shelter had further deteriorated.

"Children are especially vulnerable to mosquitoes and diseases and the makeshift camp is further increasing their vulnerability," said Syed Azhar, national secretary of the Students Islamic Organisation of India, one of the groups seeking to provide aid to the refugees.

IDhar UDHAR

Iddhar Udhar