Updates

Rohingya girls living in camps in Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh are doing what was once impossible. "I could not study in Burma. It was too risky," says Yesmin, age 17. Starting February this year, Yesmin has been attending the new multi-purpose child and adolescent centre in Balukhali, where she is getting educated and learning new skills.

We're excited to be at the Play Summit 2019! The two-day event will focus on healing and learning of children in situations of displacement, and launch the Humanitarian Play Lab model piloted in the Rohingya refugee camps in Cox's Bazar.

Rohingya learners enjoy a visit from Her Royal Highness Princess Sarah Zeid of Jordan in a BRAC Learning Centre in Kutupalong, Cox's Bazar. 48,000 Rohingya children in the camps are now learning in colourful BRAC Learning Centres. Games, songs, art and guided lessons are used to teach math, literacy and life-skills, and support children’s psychosocial needs.

A Rohingya community leader at the inauguration of the first BRAC-UNHCR bamboo treatment plant in Cox’s Bazar. Treating the bamboo increases its lifespan from 2-3 years to 10-12 years, taking pressure off Bangladesh’s forest reserves while making shelters in the camps much more durable.
BRAC in Cox's Bazar: In Numbers

167000
people provided with shelters

100000
children supported through child friendly spaces

21063
latrines constructed

1.3M
outpatient screenings in community health outlets

1879
community awareness meetings held

61185
children and adolescents registered in learning centres

26605
trees planted in host communities

10532
psychosocial support services delivered by skilled staff

800
community mobilisation volunteers on the ground

110276
households received vegetable seeds