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Eight people killed by landslides in Rohingya camps in Bangladesh

Officials said that heavy rains caused landslides in refugee camps located in southern Bangladesh. At least eight Rohingya Muslims, including women and young children, died and others were injured.

After fleeing the 2017 crackdown by Myanmar's Buddhist majority, more than 1.2 millions Rohingya now live in overcrowded refugee camps in Cox's Bazar. They are accused of being "outsiders" in Myanmar.

The majority of families live in makeshift huts constructed from bamboo and plastic sheets, on steep deforested slopes that are particularly vulnerable to landslides.

FLEED PERSECUTION AND LOST FAMILY DUE TO LANDSLIDE

The landslides struck four different locations in the camps and buried shelters beneath mud and debris as residents slept. Police said that a Bangladeshi man died and two members of his family were injured after a part of the hillside fell onto their home in Cox's Bazar.

Ali Ahmed lost three members of his family when the bamboo and tarpaulin hut he was using to shelter them in was destroyed by a landslide.

"Fire Service personnel saved us but my father, mother and younger brother didn't survive."

We fled Myanmar to escape persecution in 2017. "I've now lost my family in Myanmar, and I have no idea what the future holds for me."

Tumpa Das said that the continued rainfall increased the likelihood of landslides. Thousands of refugees are still living in unstable slopes.

Rohingya Refugee Mohammed Taher said that fear is spread through the camps every time heavy rain begins. "Thousands of Rohingya refugees live in bamboo and tarpaulin huts built on unstable hillsides where even minor landslides can turn into a deadly catastrophe."

Officials said that authorities have already relocated 1,000 Rohingya refugees to safer areas from areas prone to landslides and are planning a move of several thousand more in phases.

Mohammed Mizanur Rahman is Bangladesh's commissioner for refugee relief and repatriation. He said that awareness campaigns were also being conducted in the camps, to reduce the possibility of more casualties.

The renewed fighting in Myanmar's Rakhine State raised concerns about a "fresh influx" of Rohingya refugee across the border. Bangladeshi authorities have increased monitoring along the border amid reports that people are gathering near the border to try and enter the country.

The Bangladesh?Meteorological Department forecasts more heavy rains in the?coming days, prompting officials to be on high alert for landslides and other flash floods.

Landslides, flooding and other natural disasters are frequent during the monsoon in refugee camps. They can cause death and damage to homes, roads, and other infrastructure. (Reporting and editing by Kate Mayberry and William Maclean; Ruma Paul)

(source: Reuters)