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    Bangladesh: Doctors Without Borders sees severe spike in arrivals of war-wounded Rohingya from Myanmar

    border violence

    A Doctors Without Borders team in Kutupalong Hospital prepares to provide treatment to patients who were injured during renewed outbreaks of violence in the border areas between Myanmar and Bangladesh. ©Jan Bohm/MSF

    In the four days leading up to 7 August, Doctors Without Borders teams in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, treated 39 people for violence-related injuries. More than 40 per cent were women and children. Many had mortar shell injuries and gunshot wounds. Numbers peaked on 6 August when Doctors Without Borders teams treated 21 wounded people. Doctors Without Borders staff at the clinic say this is the first time in a year that they have seen serious injuries on this scale.

    Considering the rise in the number of wounded Rohingya patients crossing from Myanmar in recent days, and the nature of the injuries our teams are treating, we are becoming increasingly concerned about the impact of the conflict on Rohingya people,” says Orla Murphy, Doctors Without Borders country representative in Bangladesh. “It is clear that safe space for civilians in Myanmar is shrinking more each day, with people caught up in the ongoing fighting and forced to make perilous journeys to Bangladesh to seek safety.”

    Patients have described to Doctors Without Borders staff the desperate situation in Rakhine state. Some reported seeing people bombed while trying to find boats to cross the river into Bangladesh and escape the violence. Others described seeing hundreds of dead bodies on the riverbanks. Many patients spoke of being separated from their families en route to safer areas and of loved ones being killed in the violence. Many people said they were fearful that family members remaining in Myanmar would not survive.

    Conflict has been escalating in Rakhine state since October 2023, causing immense suffering to the Rohingya population and crippling the healthcare system. “Our patients tell us that they faced extreme difficulties in accessing medical facilities in Myanmar due to the highly volatile situation there,” says Murphy.

    The conflict has also impacted Doctors Without Borders’s ability to run medical activities safely. In June, Doctors Without Borders was forced to suspend its services in Northern Rakhine state because of the violence, depriving people of vital medical care and further deepening the humanitarian crisis.

    Doctors Without Borders calls for the immediate protection of civilians caught up in the conflict. “People must not come under indiscriminate attack and should be allowed to leave for safer areas, while all those in need of vital medical care should have unhindered and sustained access to medical facilities,” says Murphy.

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