According to IQNA dispatches, with the very little help from international organizations and other countries arriving for the refugees, they are living in grim and critical conditions.
Lack of drinking water and food, severe malnutrition, and deplorable sanitary conditions are threatening the lives of thousands of Rohingya Muslims living in makeshift camps near the Myanmar border in Bangladesh.
The situation necessitates immediate response from the international community and all countries of the world to take immediate action to help the refugees.
The Islamic Republic of Iran, and its Red Crescent Society (IRCS), has been among the few countries that took steps to provide the Rohingya refugees with humanitarian aid.
The first consignment of the humanitarian aid from Iran was distributed among the displaced refugees in Bangladesh on Saturday.
Weighing 40 tons, it was distributed among Rohingya Muslims in three refugee camps southwest of Bangladesh after being airlifted to Shah Amanat airport in the port city of Chittagong.
The Rohingya, described as "the world’s most persecuted minority,” have been denied citizenship in Myanmar, which has effectively rendered them stateless.
Myanmar’s government has laid a siege to the western state of Rakhine, where the Rohingya Muslims are concentrated.
There, horrific violence, including killing, rape and torching property, has been taking place against the minority Muslims, according to reports and eyewitnesses.
Soldiers and extremist Buddhists have reportedly been killing or raping the Muslims and setting their homes on fire.
Myanmar’s government says 400 people, mostly Muslims, have died in the latest bout of violence. The UN says the actual number likely tops 1,000.
So far, the global community has failed to take action against the "ethnic cleansing” of the Rohingya and to immediately demand an end to the atrocities.