ALJAZEERA
7 Jan 2024
Hundreds of shelters at the refugee camp in southeastern Bangladesh were gutted with arson suspected.
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“At least 711 shelters were fully burned and 63 were partially damaged,” Rahman said, adding that five education centres and two mosques were also destroyed. He said the fire made 4,000 people homeless.
There were no casualties, and the fire has been brought under control, he added.
“We have ordered a probe into the fire,” he added. “We suspect it is an act of arson”.
Shafiqul Islam, the head of the Ukhiya Fire Station, separately told The Associated Press news agency that the fire broke out at approximately midnight at the Kutupalong camp in Ukhiya and spread quickly, fanned by strong winds.
“The fire was big, and it destroyed about 1,040 shelters in the camp,” he said.
“We took about two hours to get the blaze under control, engaging 10 fire units from Ukhiya and other stations in the district.”
Islam said that although it is not confirmed, preliminary statements from the refugees suggested that it was caused by a mud oven.
The UN refugee agency said the “large fire damaged many refugee shelters”, adding that it was “supporting people affected”.
Fires in the dozens of Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh are common, especially during the dry season from November to April.
But many of the camps are also riven by violence between rival Rohingya groups.
Police say security in the camps has worsened, with more than 60 refugees killed in turf wars and drug-related clashes last year, the highest number on record.
In March 2023, a fire in Kutupalong camp – one of the world’s largest refugee settlements – destroyed 2,000 shelters.
Two years earlier, at least 15 Rohingya were killed and 50,000 left homeless after a blaze in the same camp.
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