Catholic and other aid groups are offering
Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh gas and stoves to sustain themselves as well as tree saplings to help combat deforestation close to the Myanmar border.
Agencies including Catholic-run Caritas Chittagong, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have been helping the persecuted Muslim minority eke out a living at the camps despite
crowded and unsanitary conditions amid the monsoon rains.
Thousands of others who lacked documents have reportedly been
evicted from the camps without warning to make way for tourism.
Since July, the the agencies have been distributing gas as an alternative means of fuel for cooking. The charities have coordinated with Rohingya community leaders to select 20,000 families from various settlements in
Cox's Bazar.
Each family gets a 12kg liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinder, a gas stove and a tree sapling. The cylinders cost 1,200 taka (US$14) and can run for up to a month on average.
The aid groups have also set up a refilling system to replace the empty cylinders as part of this six-month project, said Nikar-uz-Zaman, chief government officer of Ukhiya sub-district.
"The arrival of hundreds of thousands of refugees has put the
forest, wildlife and the whole environment under threat," he told ucanews.com.
"Forests have been cleared to make way for shelters, and firewood for cooking. So we decided to introduce an alternative way of cooking, to ease the pressure on the forest and the environment," he said.
A monitoring team will track the progress of the scheme in the coming months to see if it is effective in curbing the number of trees the refugees cut down to use as firewood, as well as to measure its cost-effectiveness and safety, he said.
"Once the pilot project has been successfully completed, we have a long-term plan for alternative fuel for refugees. This could be a catalyst for further conserving the environment," Nikar-uz-Zaman added.