UPDATE – Turkish aid for Rohingya reaches Bangladesh

UPDATES WITH AID ARRIVED IN BANGLADESH; ADDS REMARKS BY TURKISH AMBASSADOR TO BANGLADESH; CHANGES HEADLINE, LEDE; REVISES DECK

By Md. Kamruzzaman and Aybuke Inal Kamaci

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AA) – A Turkish military cargo plane carrying hospital supplies and a field hospital for Bangladesh arrived on Saturday following the March 22 deadly blaze in Cox’s Bazar which shelters thousands of Rohingya refugees.

“Despite so many challenges due to the pandemic and prevailing situation, the cargo plane safely reached Cox’s Bazar and we expect that the construction work of the hospital will be started immediately,” Ismail Gundogdu, Bangladesh’s coordinator of Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency, told Anadolu Agency.

On the instructions of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) and Health Ministry along with the Environment and Urbanization Ministry began work to deliver aid to the region.

A new field hospital, prepared to help the damaged Turkish field hospital become operational again, was loaded on an A 400M-type military cargo plane at the Etimesgut Military Airport in the capital Ankara early Saturday.

A total of 22 personnel from the Turkish Health Ministry, AFAD, and Turkey's Housing and Development Administration also reached Bangladesh.

The Turkish field hospital was one of the largest healthcare centers in the refugee camp said to be the world's largest. It houses more than 1.2 million Rohingya refugees including the 750,000 who fled violence and persecution in Myanmar in August 2017.

The UN has confirmed that at least 15 people have been killed, 560 injured, and 400 still missing, while at least 10,000 shelters have been destroyed.

Besides others, Turkish humanitarian agencies have also mobilized their resources to respond to the emergency.

The Turkish field hospital had been providing medical services to 1,000 patients every day until it was completely destroyed by fire on Monday. “Of the beneficiaries, 70% were Rohingya and 30% were members of the host community," Turkish Ambassador to Bangladesh Mustafa Osman Turan told Anadolu Agency earlier.

The hospital served a total of 512,101 patients since its establishment in 2018, according to hospital records.

Turan said on Saturday that a second plane will arrive in a week and the field hospital will resume its health services, tweeting: "5 days after the massive fire which wreaked havoc in Rohingya refugee camps & totally destroyed the Turkish field hospital, Turkey resent a new field hospital by a military cargo plane. A second plane will arrive in a week & the field hospital will resume its health services."

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