Go Back Go Back
Go Back Go Back
Go Back Go Back

UNFPA Bangladesh Seeks Emergency Funding for Reproductive Health and Gender-Based Violence Response for Rohingya Women and Girls Arriving from Myanmar

UNFPA Bangladesh Seeks Emergency Funding for Reproductive Health and Gender-Based Violence Response for Rohingya Women and Girls Arriving from Myanmar

Press Release

UNFPA Bangladesh Seeks Emergency Funding for Reproductive Health and Gender-Based Violence Response for Rohingya Women and Girls Arriving from Myanmar

calendar_today 12 September 2017

A Rohingya woman receives a UNFPA Dignity Kit with clothing and personal hygiene items

US$ 13 million urgently needed to meet rapidly growing needs amid a massive humanitarian crisis

12 September 2017, Dhaka - As thousands upon thousands of desperate Rohingya civilians continue to cross into Bangladesh from neighbouring Myanmar, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Bangladesh is urgently seeking US$ 13 million to provide lifesaving reproductive health and gender-based violence response services to women and girls who constitute an estimated 67 percent of the new arrivals.

Since 25 August, 313,000 people are estimated to have already crossed the border into Cox’s Bazar District, more than doubling the Rohingya population there over the span of just two weeks and still increasing day by day, thereby overwhelming existing camps and settlements as well as host communities and relief agencies.

Desperate need, lifesaving response

Among the 128,000 new arrivals assessed so far by the Inter-Sector Coordination Group, 13% were pregnant or lactating women who were in need of life-saving maternal and newborn health care services. As in any humanitarian emergency, the risk of gender-based violence increases significantly as well putting women and girls at heightened risk.

“Women do not stop getting pregnant or having babies just because an emergency hits,” noted Iori Kato, Acting Representative of UNFPA Bangladesh. “Among the UN family, UNFPA takes the lead for sexual and reproductive health as well as gender-based violence response, a responsibility we take very seriously.”

UNFPA has already deployed midwives trained in humanitarian response to complement midwives and other personnel who had already been serving in Cox’s Bazar. These midwives are attending to the medical needs of pregnant women, mothers and their newborns, delivering babies and providing emergency obstetric care. They are also looking after survivors of sexual violence as necessary, utilizing their expertise in the clinical management of rape.

Clean Delivery Kits, Dignity Kits, Women Friendly Spaces

“The women who are coming for check-ups all have a terrified and exhausted look,” said Sumaya, a UNFPA-supported midwife posted in the Nayapara refugee camp. “We keep hearing stories from them of walking through jungles and across hills for days without food, their children carried over their shoulders.  They’ve lost their homes.”

UNFPA’s Clean Delivery Kits contain essential supplies for child delivery and post-natal care. UNFPA’s Dignity Kits, being distributed in the thousands, include clothing, personal hygiene items and a flashlight so that women and girls can more freely and safely access lifesaving supplies including food, water and medicine. And UNFPA’s Women Friendly Spaces provide a safe place for women and girls to receive referral services as necessary, along with psychosocial support and counselling as well as professional case management for gender-based violence.

“Because of this safe space, I rested and was able to breastfeed my children,” said one woman who availed of a Woman Friendly Space. “I lost my husband and one child. Here I’ve received mental health support, and have a place to talk about my suffering on this journey.  This is a place of peace for women like us.”

Scaling up UNFPA’s response now and in the long term

So far, UNFPA’s services have only been able to address a portion of the continuously expanding needs of Rohingya women and girls entering Bangladesh.

“The magnitude of these needs is immense, and growing,” noted UNFPA’s Iori Kato.  “Now, more than ever, we must be able to scale up our life-saving interventions to meet them.  The US$ 13 million in funding that UNFPA Bangladesh is requesting for will allow us to carry out our wide-ranging responsibilities through August 2018.  We thank our donors for their crucial support now and in the future.”

 


For more information, contact:

Rachel Tze, UNFPA Bangladesh Communications Officer: tze@unfpa.org / +880 177 978 4860