Abstract:
A year ago, there was an impressive international community that experienced a dramatic
humanitarian crisis in the northeastern part of the Bay of Bengal.
Within a few weeks, hundreds of thousands of desperate and terrified people - 60% of
sthese children - cross the border between Myanmar and Bangladesh, unexplained
violence and atrocities that forced them to flee. Twelve months later, memories of this
experience remain unfounded among the roughly one million Rohingya refugees,
including many of the past cross-border flows that live in narrow, primitive shelters in the
congested and often unhygienic Cox Bazaar camps, fact, older children and young people
who cannot learn life can become a "lost generation", ready for people and for those who
use them for political or other purposes.