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NEPAL: Fire-affected Bhutanese
refugees face hardship
March 5, 2008 - (IRIN) About 8,000 Bhutanese refugees
are struggling to cope after the fire which destroyed most of their
homes at Goldhap camp in eastern Nepal on 2 March.
Lack of proper shelter, latrines and health care (rather than food
and clothing) are the most immediate problems facing refugees after
about 90 percent of the 1,512 homes at the camp were burnt down,
according to refugee leaders and aid workers.
“The situation is terrible for the refugees and it may take
a long time before they are able to get proper housing,” refugee
Indra Timilsina, told IRIN on 5 March from Goldhap camp, one of
seven camps in eastern Nepal which have been sheltering some 108,000
Bhutanese refugees for the past 17 years. The camp is in Jhapa District,
nearly 500km southeast of Kathamndu.
Timilsina said all the fire-affected refugee families had had to
take shelter in makeshift tents - plastic sheets attached to bamboo
poles.
According to UNHCR, help and support are being provided regularly
from many quarters - the Nepalese government, the local population,
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and UN agencies.
However, aid agencies said rebuilding the camp infrastructure and
houses would require a lot of resources and manpower, and it might,
therefore, take over two months to build new homes for the refugees.
“The refugees are going through difficult times and our staff
are working around the clock to help them,” said Marceline
Rozario, head of the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) Nepal, an international
NGO helping Bhutanese refugees.
Threat of disease
Recent heavy rain and cold weather are causing problems, especially
for pregnant mothers and children who are most vulnerable to diseases,
according to NGOs.
They said there had been no serious disease outbreaks so far, but
cautioned that living in such cramped conditions with poor sanitation
was conducive to the spread of disease.
Health workers in the camps also warned that lack of proper sanitation
could contaminate water resources - more latrines are needed. Thousands
of refugees are using only 30 latrines built so far with the help
of LWF.
“Sanitation is a challenge at the moment and we are trying
our best to help the refugees,” said Rozario.
Nirmal Rimal of the Association of Medical Doctors of Asia (AMDA)
Nepal, told IRIN from the camp that they were alert to the possibility
of epidemics and working to prevent them.
AMDA is the main agency focusing on health in the camps. Its officials
said most attention was being given to children, pregnant women
and those with chronic diseases who need regular medication.
With manpower and resources in short supply, AMDA had to use health
volunteers and workers from other Bhutanese camps after its 33 refugee
medical staff also lost their homes in the fire and were unable
to work.
We already have a good contingency health plan should there be any
disease outbreak,” said Rimal, adding that there was an urgent
need for starting mobile clinics.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77129
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