The place did the Billion Greenback Funding for Rohingya Refugees Go? — World Points

COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh, July 10 (IPS) – Landslides and flooding triggered by heavy monsoon rains swept by means of the world’s most densely populated focus of refugee camps this week, killing a minimum of 14 Rohingya refugees, most of them girls and women.
Three women and their instructor had been killed in an Islamic studying heart hit by a landslide on July 8. Not less than 10 extra refugees had been killed in separate landslides in six camps.
1000’s of households within the camps in Cox’s Bazar, southeast Bangladesh, have been relocated to safer locations, principally at studying facilities. A whole lot of ‘properties’ – tarpaulin and bamboo shelters – have been destroyed and flooded.
Tragically such disasters are commonplace, particularly within the cyclone and monsoon season. The deaths have additionally prompted the predictable response by help companies to name for extra funding.
However past the rapid effort of rescuing survivors, what’s now actually wanted is an pressing concentrate on how the cash obtainable is definitely spent – as revealed within the alarming findings of an audit by the UN Workplace of Inner Oversight Providers (OIOS).
OIOS Report 2025/084 raises severe issues over UNHCR’s Rohingya response in Bangladesh in challenge planning, procurement, monitoring and efficient use of humanitarian sources.

As reported just lately by the Bangladeshi newspaper New Age, tens of millions of {dollars} had been spent on infrastructure that remained unused; initiatives overlapped; procurement processes lacked ample oversight, and a number of other packages failed to realize meant targets.
All this at a time when humanitarian help is shrinking even whereas 1000’s extra stateless Moslem Rohingya displaced by ongoing battle in neighbouring Myanmar proceed to reach, becoming a member of a mass exodus of some 700,000 Rohingya who fled a brutal crackdown by the Myanmar army in Rakhine State in 2017.
Among the many findings of the audit, a specialised hospital in Ukhiya costing US$1.5 million was constructed however remained unused. A 20-bed inpatient facility in Bhasan Char, with $140,000 of photo voltaic gear and a $74,301 X-ray machine was additionally unused. As well as $18,000 was spent on honour boards, $23,000 on employees uniforms, and $27,000 on producing a documentary. The audit highlighted these expenditures as pointless whereas humanitarian wants remained pressing.
Maybe most stunning, UNHCR spent $182,028 on cutlery (spoons, forks, knives and so on) that refugees largely don’t use as a result of we historically eat with our fingers. I’ve lived in one of many Cox’s Bazar refugee camps since 2017 and by no means discovered such issues distributed to us.
In distinction, meals help for many Rohingya refugees has been diminished from $12 to $7 per individual monthly— the price of a few cups of espresso in lots of international locations the place these humanitarian employees are based mostly and making selections on cuts in meals rations.
Casual studying facilities that after offered a minimum of a little bit of training have in lots of instances grow to be empty playgrounds. Hospitals constructed with tens of millions of {dollars} usually present solely fundamental, low-cost medicines resembling paracetamol and omeprazole. A private instance — final 12 months I had to purchase Antozal nasal remedy for my daughter from an area pharmacy after we waited hours in line to see two extremely paid medical doctors. Later once we went with the prescription, we had been instructed the medication weren’t obtainable due to funding cuts.
The audit additionally discovered that UN companions spent $4.2 million on shelter supplies that UNHCR had already procured. Photo voltaic and power initiatives costing $194,000, and medicines and medical gear amounting to $800,000, had been additionally duplicated due to defective procurement.
The audit famous that eight years into the Rohingya disaster, 67 % of funding had been spent on rapid humanitarian reduction, whereas solely 17 % was allotted to empowerment and long-term options.
As but UNHCR has not responded to questions by the media over the audit – not for the primary time. UNHCR has usually been criticized for responding solely throughout main emergencies, resembling giant fires within the camps that entice worldwide consideration and are seen as moments to justify appeals for extra funding spent on sustaining UN employees, their salaries and organizational prices.
Main worldwide human rights organizations and worldwide information retailers additionally present little curiosity.
For the reason that Myanmar army and allied Buddhist militia launched the killings and mass displacement of the principally stateless Rohingya minority in August 2017, the worldwide group has offered greater than $5 billion in help funding. The newest attraction by the Joint Response Plan (JPR) for 2026 is for $710 million.
But in the event you go to the refugee camps in the present day you’ll find that there’s nonetheless no formal training system, medical providers stay insufficient, and sturdy shelters haven’t been constructed.
Refugees exist in shelters in hilly areas principally denuded of bushes and liable to catastrophic floods and landslides. Round 200,000 newly arrived refugees since 2024 haven’t been supplied with shelter and stay in extraordinarily weak circumstances.
So my query is easy: The place did the billions of {dollars} go?
This isn’t simply concerning the Rohingya in Cox’s Bazar. The JRP for the Rohingya Humanitarian Disaster is led by the federal government of Bangladesh, the UNHCR and IOM and contains scores of UN companies and worldwide and nationwide NGOs.
Annually the JRP is meant to allocate some 20 to 30 % of its funding to profit Bangladeshi host communities.
Nonetheless, many native residents residing even throughout the camp perimeter have by no means acquired a bag of rice or an LPG cylinder. Their kids haven’t benefited from livelihood or expertise coaching packages. Many are usually not even conscious that funding has been allotted for host communities.
The time has come to determine unbiased High quality Assurance and Monetary Audit Committees for Rohingya camp operations. These committees ought to embody representatives from related UN our bodies, the federal government of Bangladesh, donor international locations, unbiased human rights organizations, and the Rohingya diaspora. Their function can be to make sure that each challenge is genuinely wanted by Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi host communities, and that they’re correctly carried out.
Humanitarian help ought to go to the folks it’s meant to serve—not grow to be a system that primarily sustains 1000’s of jobs and doesn’t present for correct unbiased oversight.
Assist organizations shouldn’t be in a position to evade duty, as in these current disasters, by blaming deaths on lack of funding.
Transparency, accountability, unbiased oversight and measurable impression should grow to be the muse of the Rohingya humanitarian response for so long as we Rohingya are usually not in a position to return to Myanmar with our rights, security and dignity.
Mohammed Zonaid is an award-winning Rohingya journalist and photographer, in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
IPS UN Bureau
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