Location: Bangladesh
More than 900,000 refugees still call Bangladesh home--one year after the majority fled escalating violence in western Myanmar.
Since 2017, school meals have given Rohingya children a critical source of nutrition and a life-changing opportunity to continue their education after fleeing violence.
Every year on August 19th, the world pays tribute to aid workers who risk their lives in humanitarian service. Meet five humanitarians with the World Food Programme (WFP) who are fighting to make the world a better place. đź’Ş
Halfway through the year, a nonstop effort is underway to protect hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees from the worst of the monsoon season.
This past May, the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a resolution officially recognizing the link between conflict and hunger for the first time
In Bangladesh, saving lives means making sure that every Rohingya refugee has the food they need to survive.
WFP engineers are in a race against time to create safe land in the world’s largest refugee camp where the most vulnerable will be relocated before the next crisis strikes.
Too often we don’t hear about the people who have been affected by this crisis. Their stories and experiences must not be forgotten.
The rain has started to fall where nearly 700,000 refugees have sought safety since last August. What happens now?
The monsoon season sets new challenges for people living in camps on the Bangladesh border.
We talk to an aid worker who’s been on the ground in Cox's Bazar since the beginning of the Rohingya crisis.