Major violence against Rohingya people has seen families fleeing for their lives from Myanmar’s northern Rakhine State.

The Rohingya are an ethnic group that is known to be one of the world’s most persecuted minorities. 


HELP SAVE ROHINGYA CHILDRENGIVE FOOD

Children ran for their lives

Children are right now living in makeshift shelters in Bangladesh. Food is scarce. Clean water is hard to come by. Medicine is needed to treat and stop the spread of diseases. 

Families have been pouring into the cramped camp in Bangladesh. Even though the Myanmar government has agreed to take them back, the camp is still overflowing with people.

We are very worried about the upcoming monsoon season. Heavy rains will likely flood toilet blocks, contaminating children’s drinking water with human waste. Children are already getting sick from diseases that spread like wildfire through the camp.

Families have fled horrific violence. Villages have been burnt to the ground.

Rohingya child

REMINDERS OF THE 

THE DAULATDIA BROTHEL

"HORRORS I WILL

NEVER FORGET"

LET'S STOP THISDONATE TODAY

Please donate today to save the lives of Rohingya children.

REMINDERS OF THEIR

NIGHTMARE ARE

REMINDERS OF THEIR

EVERYWHERE

Hurricane-force winds destroyed houses, schools and entire villages on the island of Koro in Fiji. 

Nearly two years on, families are still recovering from Cyclone Winston.

Thirteen-year-old Gloria was scared out of her mind when the storm first hit her village. “I was hiding in my bed and thinking of my family.”

HELP FEED CHILDREN

MEDICINE

A packet of Oral Rehydration Salts to treat diarrhoea, which can kill children like Rahmmot in just a few days.

CLEAN WATER

Water purification tablets to make sure Rahmmot and his mother have clean drinking water, free from germs and bacteria.

This is how you can help children like Rahmmot

FOOD

A food kit with rice, oil, lentils, flour and sugar to feed a family like Rahmmot and his mother Majuma.

SUPPLIES

Essential items like soap and toilet paper to stay clean and keep diseases away.

Rahmmot in his mothers arms

Right now Rahmmot and his mother are living in a makeshift shelter made of flimsy plastic at the camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. 

When it rains the water comes through the roof, the mud floor gets wet and the plastic flaps in the wind. Mosquitoes attack his small body and he cries through the night.

Majuma has to walk half an hour each way, three times a day, just to collect water. With thousands of families living in this makeshift camp, children are completely dependent on daily deliveries of food and clean water to survive.

Rahmmot is already suffering from diarrhoea and a fever that could easily kill a young child like him.

Medicine could easily save his life today.

Rahmmot's story

One-and-a-half year old Rahmmot

Rahmmot and his mother, Majuma, escaped widespread brutal violence and killings in Myanmar.  

They arrived at the camp in Bangladesh hungry and exhausted. Majuma had to carry her young son up and down mountains in the rain for five days until they crossed the border.

“I was so scared. 

If we had stayed we might have been killed, 

so we ran away to save our lives.

GIVE MEDICINE NOW
Children in makeshift camps in Bangladesh

This is the camp where Rahmmot now lives. It is a breeding ground for disease. Thick orange mud is everywhere and quickly turns into a mudslide throughout the camp when it rains. 

Rahmmot’s mother has already noticed spots all over his tiny body.