Photo Essay: Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh camps

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American photographer Greg Constantine recently visited southern Bangladesh, where some half a million Rohingya have sought refuge after fleeing a military crackdown in Myanmar. 

This photo essay was supported by the Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide, US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

29 September 2017 |GREG CONSTANTINE | South China Morning Post

“Last week, American photographer Greg Constantine was in Bangladesh, finding out what life is like for the more than 421,000 Rohingya who have fled what has been described as “textbook ethnic cleansing” in neighbouring Myanmar.

He visited towns across the south: Shah Puri Dwip, Sabrang, Shamlapur, Cox’s Bazar, and two sprawling refugee camps: the government-run Kutupalong and the makeshift Balukhali.

“The scale is so huge right now that most people are living in informal camps just about everywhere – along the sides of roads, in mosques, in forests, in plastic huts. The suffering and loss are beyond words,” he says of an increasingly desperate situation.

These are his images of an unfolding humanitarian crisis.

Picture: Greg Constantine: A Rohingya mother and child cross the Naf River to Bangladesh in boats under the cover of darkness, on September 21. After their villages in Buthidaung township, in Rakhine state, were destroyed, these Rohingya spent days walking to the river. The Myanmar military’s “scorched-earth” campaign has destroyed almost half of the Rohingya villages in northern Rakhine, causing a steady stream of desperate refugees to filter out of the country on a daily basis.

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: Some of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who have flooded into southern Bangladesh over the past month. The highway between Cox’s Bazar and Teknaf sees a steady procession.

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: Rohingya wait to receive food at a humanitarian aid site near the Balukhali refugee camp on September 19.

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: Dilara, 22, a Rohingya who arrived in Bangladesh on September 9, in a refugee camp.

Greg Constantine: Nowhere People 

No one can imagine what it is like to be stateless. I fly through this life with nowhere to land.” Stateless man,  2011

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: A Rohingya refugee camp in Balukhali, Cox’s Bazar.

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: A group of Rohingya, who fled their village in Maungdaw, Rakhine, and crossed the Naf River into Bangladesh, travel in the back of a truck from Shah Puri Dwip to the Balukhali refugee camp on September 18.

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: Nummalakin, 50, fled with his family after his village in Buthidaung was attacked on August 29. Having walked for seven days, they arrived in Bangladesh on September 5.

 

Picture: Greg Constantine: A Rohingya refugee camp in Balukhali.

This photo essay was supported by the Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide, US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

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