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Camp life: MSF

Bangladesh

MSF staff walking through Cox's Bazar camps. Bangladesh, June 2023.
© Victor Caringal/MSF
Seven years on from fleeing targeted violence in Myanmar, Rohingya people are still living in dire conditions in the Cox’s Bazar district of Bangladesh.

Around 1 million Rohingya refugees are living in Cox’s Bazar, which has hosted refugees from Myanmar since 1978. As violence continues in Rakhine state, Myanmar, people continue to flee across the border to Bangladesh. They arrive to Cox’s Bazar’s over-cramped living spaces and lack of basic services, finding themselves reliant on humanitarian aid for survival.

We are on site in Cox’s Bazar, running three 24/7 hospitals and supporting in five other health facilities. Our teams provide free of charge services like family planning, neonatal intensive care, mental health support, and non-communicable disease management.

In Bangladesh’s capital city, Dhaka, where MSF first worked in 1972, we are running a clinic for local communities in the Kamrangirchar neighbourhood. We also support the Kamrangirchar hospital by providing sexual and reproductive health services. As a low-lying coastal country, Bangladesh is exposed to severe flooding and monsoons. Our teams are prepared to support national authorities during flooding emergencies.

Our activities in 2024 in Bangladesh

Data and information from the International Activity Report 2024.

MSF in Bangladesh in 2024 Following an upsurge in fighting in Myanmar in 2024, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) teams witnessed an increase in the number of Rohingya refugees arriving in Bangladesh, many with violence-related injuries.
Bangladesh IAR map 2024
Country map for the IAR 2024.
© MSF

In Cox’s Bazar, thousands of people continued to receive healthcare in MSF’s eight health facilities. MSF provided emergency care and sexual and reproductive health services, as well as mental health support and treatment for victims of sexual and gender-based violence. We also treated patients for a range of non-communicable diseases, acute watery diarrhoea, respiratory infections, dengue fever, and measles.  

Since mid-2022, there has been a significant increase in violence inside the Cox’s Bazar refugee camps, due, in part, to conflict over the border in Myanmar. In September 2024, the fighting between armed groups reached such a level that we had to temporarily suspend activities in some of the camps for a number of days. MSF teams treated some of the injured. Earlier in the year, we also witnessed Rohingya boys and young men being threatened and pressured into returning to Myanmar to fight.

Scabies remained a major health issue in Cox’s Bazar. In the last quarter of 2024, we saw a sharp increase in cases compared to 2023, when numbers had reduced following a mass drug administration. An MSF-led assessment found reduced chlorination and poor water distribution across all camps, likely contributing to a rise in water-borne diseases.

A study carried out by Epicentre, MSF’s epidemiological centre, published in June, reported a high prevalence of hepatitis C infection in adults living in the camps. By December, MSF and other organisations had committed about 60 per cent of needed resources to tackle the virus.

In the capital, Dhaka, MSF continued to run two clinics in Kamrangirchar district, offering sexual and reproductive healthcare, medical and psychological treatment for victims and survivors of sexual and gender-based violence, and occupational health services for factory workers. 
 

In 2024
 
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