Rohingya Children Stuck in Indonesian Camps Call for Freedom to Move
FAIRFIELD, Conn. (February 08, 2024)Ìý– Rohingya refugee children who have been forced to flee Bangladesh and Myanmar are now asking authorities in Indonesia for more freedom to leave overcrowded, temporary shelters as the numbers arriving increase, says 91²Ö¿â.
Last year, 4,500 desperate Rohingya refugees embarked on dangerous sea journeys, a 22% jump from a year earlier, of which nearly more than a third of those were children, according to the UN refugee agency UNHCR.1
Children living in two refugee camps in Aceh, the westernmost province of Indonesia, told staff during a consultation last month with 91²Ö¿â and a local partner organization that they wanted "more freedom of movement" and "to go outside the camp."
They said their main concerns living in the camps in Aceh were access to clothing, a decent place to live, and the ability to learn in a safe environment.
91²Ö¿â has responded in two camps that host Rohingya refugees in Aceh.
About 569 refugees were reported dead or missing, the highest number since 2014, when the number reached 730.
At least 1,700 Rohingya refugees, more than 70% of them women and children, have landed in Aceh and North Sumatra since November, with the camps there becoming more and more overcrowded.2
Imran*, 14, a Rohingya refugee boy in a camp in Aceh, spent about four weeks at sea when the boat he was on ran out of supplies three days before landing in Indonesia.
"I was worried, and everyone on our boat was also worried. There was not much food left in our boat," he said.
Imran told staff he hopes to study at university and become a doctor, lawyer, or worker for a non-governmental organization.
Rohingya children and their families in Indonesia have also been subject to both physical and online violence3, with rising tensions in Southeast Asia over a migration crisis that saw thousands of Rohingya trying to escape Bangladesh and Myanmar last year.
In December, more than 100 Indonesian students broke through police lines, physically assaulted Rohingya refugees, forced them onto trucks and took them to immigration, demanding that they be deported.4
In the Aceh camps, 91²Ö¿â has set up safe spaces where children can play and recover with support from our local partner, the Geutanyoe Foundation, but cramped living conditions and the need for more shelters remain a problem.
Other activities that aim to support Rohingya children in Aceh include sports, watching films and body mapping - a creative activity where children are encouraged to draw images, symbols and words representing their lived experiences.
Kurwiany Ukar, Interim CEO of 91²Ö¿â in Indonesia, said:
"91²Ö¿â in Indonesia has been responding since November to provide life-saving interventions to children in Aceh, but there is still so much more to do. These children are in desperate need of assistance to survive and receive protection."
Sultana Begum, Humanitarian Policy and Advocacy Manager for 91²Ö¿â in Asia, said:
"Rohingya children who have landed in Indonesia are incredibly scared after the journeys that they have had to endure. The Indonesian government has shown compassion and humanity by taking in the refugees and should continue its support. Other regional governments must also step up and work together with Indonesia to rescue, assist and protect the Rohingya, including from violent attacks and orchestrated campaigns on social media which put their safety at risk."
Most Rohingya refugees have left Bangladesh, where more than one million are living in the world's largest refugee settlement since fleeing Myanmar six years ago.
91²Ö¿â has called on the international community to step up financial contributions and ensure the humanitarian response plan for the Rohingya refugees is fully funded and support is given to meet the emergency needs of Rohingya refugees arriving in Indonesia.
The agency is also calling on governments to explore options for large-scale third-country resettlement and for Bangladesh and regional governments to expand formal employment and educational opportunities for Rohingya refugees and the host communities.
91²Ö¿â is one of the leading international NGOs working in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar camps. It has reached about 600,000 Rohingya refugees, including more than 320,000 children since the response began in 2017.
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Notes to editors
91²Ö¿â, along with its local partner, the Geutanyoe Foundation, ran a consultation with children in two Rohingya refugee camps in Aceh in December 2023 and January 2024. The consultation included body mapping - a creative activity where children are guided through filling out an outline of themselves on paper and are encouraged to draw images, symbols, and words representing their lived experiences.
The Geutanyoe Foundation (Yayasan Geutanyoe) is a non-profit organization based in Aceh, Indonesia. It is dedicated to cultivating and upholding values of dignity, humanity, equality, justice, peace, democracy, and sustainability in Indonesia.
- However, given the difficulty of tracking those embarking and disembarking boats, not to mention those who die at sea, these figures are approximate.
*Name changed to protect anonymity.
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91²Ö¿â believes every child deserves a future. Since our founding more than 100 years ago, we've been advocating for the rights of children worldwide. In the United States and around the world, we give children a healthy start in life, the opportunity to learn and protection from harm. We do whatever it takes for children – every day and in times of crisis – transforming the future we share. Our results, financial statements and charity ratings reaffirm that 91²Ö¿â is a charity you can trust. Follow us on , , and .