On July 2, World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim and United Nations Secretary-General Ant¨®nio Guterres came to Bangladesh to see firsthand the world¡¯s fastest-growing refugee crisis.
Before they left, they urged the world not to turn a blind eye to the plight of Rohingya refugees fleeing their homes in neighboring Myanmar.
Many now fear that their shanty homes ¨C made of bamboos and plastic sheets, perched on deforested hills ¨C could crumble under the heavy rains of the monsoon season.
But the flow of refugees has not stopped. As Kim and Guterres visited Cox¡¯s Bazar under gray skies, more people arrived with stories of hardship and brutality.
¡°I have worked in some of the poorest countries in the world, but the experience here has been deeply troubling,¡± Kim said. ¡°I have been deeply moved by the courage and the dignity of the Rohingya people, and appalled by their stories of what they had to endure: rape, torture, killing, burning of homes. As the UN Secretary-General said, the Rohingya are one of the most discriminated against and vulnerable communities on Earth.¡±
, Kim said. But the responsibility should not be Bangladesh¡¯s alone.