This family escaped a massacre in Myanmar alongside 700,000 Rohingya refugees in 2017. But then the rainy season in Bangladesh came, putting 50,000 refugees living in shelters at risk of landslides. Less than half had been relocated to safer settlements.
Ruhul Amin and his family built a makeshift home of tarp and bamboo in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. But then tragedy struck. He lost his daughter to a landslide, one of the first fatalities of the deadly rainy season. AJ+ went to Cox's Bazar to speak with Ruhul about life in the world's biggest refugee camp. This is his story.
Producer & Narrator: Aisha Gani
Video Journalist: Rajib Mohajan
Video Editor: Anis Hammami, Alice de la chapelle
Illustrator & Animator: Nas Alhussein
Sound: Hamza Tebai
Sources:
Inter Sector Coordination Group (ISCG)
UNHCR
Restless Beings
Reuters
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Ruhul Amin and his family built a makeshift home of tarp and bamboo in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. But then tragedy struck. He lost his daughter to a landslide, one of the first fatalities of the deadly rainy season. AJ+ went to Cox's Bazar to speak with Ruhul about life in the world's biggest refugee camp. This is his story.
Producer & Narrator: Aisha Gani
Video Journalist: Rajib Mohajan
Video Editor: Anis Hammami, Alice de la chapelle
Illustrator & Animator: Nas Alhussein
Sound: Hamza Tebai
Sources:
Inter Sector Coordination Group (ISCG)
UNHCR
Restless Beings
Reuters
Subscribe for more videos:
Like us on Facebook:
Download the AJ+ app at
Follow us on Twitter:
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