Of the latest arrivals, the UN Women agency estimates that more than half are women and children, while about one in every five families is being led by a woman.
Aid workers say these women and girls must compete against male-led families while facing the threat of human traffickers in the poorly supervised camps, as they attempt to make ends meet for their offspring and other dependents.
“We used to give money to the widows when they came here at the very beginning of the influx (and) that supported the women-led families,” Nurul Hakim, a Rohingya man engaged with a non-government organization (NGO) called Al Marazul Islamia, told the Dhaka Tribune.
“But we have not been able to provide money for last four months due to the government’s instruction.”
Despite the cutback, Al Marazul Islamia is helping to run an area of the Balukhali-2/2 camp where 27 widow-led families are living under a cluster of orange tarpaulins strung across bamboo poles.
It offers a safe haven for the families, who have been left fending for themselves after fleeing to Bangladesh.
“We are collaborating with the authorities and aid providers and taking care of the children, gate keeping their living area to ensure their security and voluntarily supporting them if they need help,” Hakim said.
Hakim said another such protected area for Rohingya widows lies within the Balukhali camp, where 48 women-led families are living.
Although these areas are off-limits to men, keeping the families safe, it is difficult for the women to maintain livelihoods without earning members in the family. They are also in need of proper food and medical treatment.After losing their husbands in the military crackdown in Rakhine state of Myanmar in August 2017, the widowed Rohingya women sheltering in the refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar are now facing a daily struggle to support their families.
Over 700,000 Rohingya have crossed into Bangladesh after escaping the bloodshed in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, joining about 400,000 who were already living in squalid conditions inside the cramped camps of Cox’s Bazar.
Of the latest arrivals, the UN Women agency estimates that more than half are women and children, while about one in every five families is being led by a woman.
Aid workers say these women and girls must compete against male-led families while facing the threat of human traffickers in the poorly supervised camps, as they attempt to make ends meet for their offspring and other dependents.
“We used to give money to the widows when they came here at the very beginning of the influx (and) that supported the women-led families,” Nurul Hakim, a Rohingya man engaged with a non-government organization (NGO) called Al Marazul Islamia, told the Dhaka Tribune.
“But we have not been able to provide money for last four months due to the government’s instruction.”
Despite the cutback, Al Marazul Islamia is helping to run an area of the Balukhali-2/2 camp where 27 widow-led families are living under a cluster of orange tarpaulins strung across bamboo poles.
It offers a safe haven for the families, who have been left fending for themselves after fleeing to Bangladesh.
“We are collaborating with the authorities and aid providers and taking care of the children, gate keeping their living area to ensure their security and voluntarily supporting them if they need help,” Hakim said.
Hakim said another such protected area for Rohingya widows lies within the Balukhali camp, where 48 women-led families are living.
Although these areas are off-limits to men, keeping the families safe, it is difficult for the women to maintain livelihoods without earning members in the family. They are also in need of proper food and medical treatment.
Of the latest arrivals, the UN Women agency estimates that more than half are women and children, while about one in every five families is being led by a woman.
Aid workers say these women and girls must compete against male-led families while facing the threat of human traffickers in the poorly supervised camps, as they attempt to make ends meet for their offspring and other dependents.
“We used to give money to the widows when they came here at the very beginning of the influx (and) that supported the women-led families,” Nurul Hakim, a Rohingya man engaged with a non-government organization (NGO) called Al Marazul Islamia, told the Dhaka Tribune.
“But we have not been able to provide money for last four months due to the government’s instruction.”
Despite the cutback, Al Marazul Islamia is helping to run an area of the Balukhali-2/2 camp where 27 widow-led families are living under a cluster of orange tarpaulins strung across bamboo poles.
It offers a safe haven for the families, who have been left fending for themselves after fleeing to Bangladesh.
“We are collaborating with the authorities and aid providers and taking care of the children, gate keeping their living area to ensure their security and voluntarily supporting them if they need help,” Hakim said.
Hakim said another such protected area for Rohingya widows lies within the Balukhali camp, where 48 women-led families are living.
Although these areas are off-limits to men, keeping the families safe, it is difficult for the women to maintain livelihoods without earning members in the family. They are also in need of proper food and medical treatment.

