May 13, 2023

As Cyclone Mocha gathers in speed and ferocity, ActionAid warns of distress and destruction for over a million Rohingya refugees living in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, and six million people already in need of humanitarian assistance in Myanmar’s Rakhine state and northwestern region. In Bangladesh, a total of 5.7 million people could be exposed to the terrifying effects of the cyclone, which may be the worst cyclone to hit the region in over two decades. 

ActionAid is preparing to deliver food packages to Rohingya and host communities, including essential items such as safe drinking water, oral saline, flattened rice, fortified biscuits, and sugar. In Bangladesh, the on-site team has also been conducting door-to-door visits in the days leading up to the cyclone, to ensure preparedness messages are shared and arranging equipment to bolster homes where possible. Fearing landslides, volunteers are assisting residents in vulnerable areas to relocate, either to relatives’ houses or to designated shelters. 

Farah Kabir, Country Director of ActionAid Bangladesh, says: 

“With the predicted severity of cyclone Mocha, thousands of people are estimated to be affected, including over a million Rohingya refugees living in camps in Cox’s Bazar. In Cox’s Bazar, signal number 10 has been hoisted. Women, children, elderly people, and people with disabilities are particularly vulnerable and, therefore a priority in our emergency response.  ActionAid Bangladesh, in collaboration with the government and other actors’ initiatives, is taking various precautionary measures, including evacuation, and shifting to safe shelters. Our 800 volunteers, mainly young women, and men, are working on the ground, raising awareness through door-to-door visits and through community hotspots, such as mosques. People at-risk are in the process of being transferred to safe shelters, and we are also arranging relief packages, consisting of essential food and non-food items for the communities at risk.  

Partnership and collaboration are critical in facing Cyclone Mocha. This crisis underlines the urgent need for the COP28 climate negotiations to get a new fund to address loss and damage up and running, as Bangladesh, Myanmar, and India are once again going to be hit by escalating climate impacts.” 

ENDS 

For media requests, please email Jenna.Farineau@actionaid.org or call 202-777-3668.  

Farah Kabir, Country Director for ActionAid Bangladesh and based in Dhaka, Bangladesh, is available for interviews. 

Notes to Editors 

About ActionAid 

ActionAid is a global federation working with more than 15 million people living in more than 40 of the world’s poorest countries. We want to see a just, fair, and sustainable world in which everybody enjoys the right to a life of dignity and freedom from poverty and oppression. We work to achieve social justice and gender equality and to eradicate poverty. 

About ActionAid’s Rohingya Response Initiatives: 

ActionAid Bangladesh, as a right-based organization, has been working in the Rohingya response since 2017, in different sectors to address the multidimensional needs of the forcibly displaced population. It also works with people from the host community who have been socio-economically affected due to the influx. ActionAid Bangladesh has reached over 747,000 people in thirty-two camps and host communities through different interventions, covering protection, site management and site development, livelihood, Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) services, agriculture, skills development, psychosocial support, Gender-Based Violence (GBV), case management, community risk assessment, and emergency support during disasters.