Saturday, October, 14, 2017

  • Nation
  • World
  • States
  • Cities
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Galleries
  • Videos
  • Life Style
  • Specials
  • Opinions
  • All Sections  
    States Tamil Nadu Kerala Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Telangana Odisha
    Cities Chennai DelhiBengaluru Hyderabad Kochi Thiruvananthapuram
    Nation World Business Sport Cricket Football Tennis Other Education Social News
    Entertainment English Hindi Kannada Malayalam Tamil Telugu Review Galleries Videos
    Auto Life style Tech Health Travel Food Books Spirituality
    Opinions Editorials Ask Prabhu Columns Prabhu Chawla T J S George S Gurumurthy Ravi Shankar Shankkar Aiyar Shampa Dhar-Kamath Karamatullah K Ghori
    Edex Indulge Event Xpress Magazine The Sunday Standard E-paper
Home World

Wild elephants kill four Rohingya in Bangladesh camp

By AFP  |   Published: 14th October 2017 06:44 PM  |  

Last Updated: 14th October 2017 06:44 PM  |   A+A A-   |  

0

Share Via Email

Image for representational purpose only.

MYANMAR: Wild elephants killed four Rohingya refugees including three children as they were building a shack on forest land in southern Bangladesh Saturday, police said.

The incident occurred at Balukhali camp in Cox's Bazar district, where hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have set up makeshift shelters since fleeing violence across the border in Myanmar.

"They were trampled to death by seven or eight wild elephants. They include a woman and three children," Afrozul Haq Tutul, deputy police chief of Cox's Bazar, told AFP. 

Two people were also injured, he said, adding all the victims were Rohingya who were building a shack on in a part of the forest where wild elephants frequently search for food and shelter.  

This is the second time Rohingya refugees have been attacked by wild elephants in the area. Earlier two Rohingya -- an elderly person and a child -- were killed by elephants as they were sleeping in a makeshift shelter.  

An estimated 536,000 Rohingya have arrived in Bangladesh since a fresh outbreak of violence erupted on August 25 in Myanmar's westernmost Rakhine state.

Space at established refugee camps in Bangladesh has been all but exhausted, with new arrivals hacking away trees and other vegetation anywhere they can to erect shelters from the monsoon rain.

Many newly arrived refugees are camping in the open or along roadsides, where they rush aid trucks for food and other desperately needed supplies.

The Bangladesh government has allocated 3,000 acres (1,214 hectares) of forest land to build proper shelters for the refugees but many have already set up shacks before the actual construction begins.  

A Cox's Bazar district forest official told AFP that clashes between animals and refugees were "inevitable" as the camp areas have been a roaming ground for elephants for centuries.

"The is a reserve forest land, frequented by wild Asian elephants all the time," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.   

The authorities want to extend the existing camps around Kutupalong and Balukhali into a refugee city for 800,000 Rohingya, but the United Nations has warned such a settlement would be dangerously overcrowded.

The latest violence erupted after Rohingya militant raids on 30 police posts in Rakhine triggered a military crackdown.

The UN calls the army fightback a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing" with villages set ablaze to drive Rohingya civilians out.

TAGS
Bangladesh elephants Rohingya refugees Rohingya refugees

O
P
E
N

Latest

AAP dissolves Gurdaspur, Pathankot district units

'Rebels' hurl IED at Manipur MLA’s house

Shikhar Dhawan back in ODI team for NZ series

Mughalsarai railway station in UP renamed

J-K: One killed after firing in Kulgam

Nadal enters Shanghai Masters final

TM Krishna to get Indira Gandhi Award for National Integration

J-K: Telecos asked to reduce data services to 2G

Talwars' lawyers receive copy of Allahabad HC order

Videos
Kenya police use teargas to disperse opposition protesters in Kisumu
Two suspects in Gauri Lankesh murder case identified
arrow
Gallery
Here are some moments from the last week captured by our photographers from across the country. IN PIC: Coir workers in Thiruvananthapuram collecting mussels. (EPS| B P Deepu)
The week with TNIE: Best pictures clicked by our photographers across South India
Gautam Gambhir was born on 14th October 1981, in New Delhi. His father Deepak Gambhir is a textile businessman, while mother Seema Gambhir is a housewife.Gambhir started playing cricket at the age of 10. He received his schooling from Modern School, New Delhi and graduated from Hindu College, University of Delhi. Selected for the first batch of National Cricket Academy in the year 2000, the left-hander was coached by Sanjay Bharadwaj of Lal Bahadur Shastri Academy in Delhi, and Raju Tandon. (Photo| PTI)
Gautam Gambhir: The former India opener, Captain of Kolkata Knight Riders turns 36 today
arrow

FOLLOW US

Copyright - newindianexpress.com 2017

Dinamani | Kannada Prabha | Samakalika Malayalam | Malayalam Vaarika | Indulgexpress | Edex Live | Cinema Express | Event Xpress

Contact Us | About Us | Careers | Privacy Policy | Search | Terms of Use | Advertise With Us

Home | Nation | World | Cities | Business | Columns | Entertainment | Sport | Magazine | The Sunday Standard