The Rohingya Crisis Is Happening And Not Enough Is Being Done About It

The fastest growing humanitarian crisis in the world needs our help to be fixed

Sarvasv Kulpati
Extra Newsfeed
3 min readDec 22, 2017

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Since August 2017, more than half a million Rohingya muslims have fled death and destruction in their homes in the Rakhine state of Myanmar for Bangladesh.

The United Nations has gone so far to call this a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing”

Who are the Rohingya?

Rohingyas are an ethnic Muslim minority in Myanmar and have been living there for centuries. However, they have been shunned basic needs like citizenship from their own country, and were even excluded from a census in 2014. According to Myanmar, they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

What Is Happening?

On 25 August, Rohingya militants attacked 30 police posts in Myanmar. In response to this, the government launched an offensive against them, what they said was only against the militants, but instead targeted the whole population.

According to the BBC,

Troops, backed by local Buddhist mobs, responded by burning their villages and attacking and killing civilians.

At least 6,700 Rohingya, including at least 730 children under the age of five, were killed in the month after the violence broke out, according to Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF).

Amnesty International says the Myanmar military also raped and abused Rohingya women and girls.

The government puts the number of dead people at 400, and claims that “clearance operations” against the militants ended on 5 September. Information, as many reports have shown, that isn’t true at all.

At least 288 villages were burnt and partly destroyed. The residents of these villages migrated by foot to Bangladesh as refugees.

Here’s another excerpt from the BBC article

Before August, there were already around 307,500 Rohingya refugees living in camps, makeshift settlements and with host communities, according to the UNHCR. A further 655,000 are estimated to have arrived since August.

These refugees set up camp wherever possible, without access to food, aid, drinking water, shelter, or healthcare.

The situation is dire

  • The whole refugee population — almost one million people — require food aid
  • 18,083 children under five have been treated for severe acute malnutrition
  • 424,100 children under 15 years of age require diphtheria vaccination after outbreak confirmed

How Can You Help?

Aid is already being given by many international charities, but they need monetary aid to be able to do anything.

The Rohingya Crisis is quickly becoming one of the fastest growing humanitarian problems in the world, but with extensive media coverage of other matters, has largely gone under the radar.

It is a crime that we on a global scale are allowing to happen under our noses, and one that shouldn’t be happening in a world as connected as the one we live in today.

We have at our service tools like the internet that we can use to bring about change that wouldn’t have been possible years ago.

I’m only a 15 year old sitting in his room typing this. The best I can do is write this for my 20–30 consistent readers. But if you are reading this, please do help.

We humans are defined by our ability to cooperate, to help each other when we need it. Now would be a good time to do so.

Here’s a great NYT article that shows you how you can help:

The best thing to do would be to donate money to a charity helping the area get access to basic needs like food and water.

If anything, you can at least raise awareness about the topic by talking to your friends and family about it.

Here’s a video I made about helping the Rohingyas that tries to put things in perspective.

Thanks for reading

Sarvasv

Want to chat? Find me on Twitter, Linkedin, and Quora

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Extra Newsfeed
Extra Newsfeed

Published in Extra Newsfeed

the same political rants you see on Facebook, but they're well written.

Sarvasv Kulpati
Sarvasv Kulpati

Written by Sarvasv Kulpati

Writing about technology, philosophy, and everything in between.