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Funding cuts fuel child marriage, leaving Rohingya kids lost generation

by Reuters

COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh Aug 22, 2025 - 10:39 am GMT+3
Edited By Kelvin Ndunga
Mohammed Faruq holds the hand of his daughter Nahima Bibi, 9, as they walk along the refugee camp, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 17, 2025. (Reuters Photo)
Mohammed Faruq holds the hand of his daughter Nahima Bibi, 9, as they walk along the refugee camp, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 17, 2025. (Reuters Photo)
by Reuters Aug 22, 2025 10:39 am
Edited By Kelvin Ndunga

Begum, a 35-year-old Rohingya refugee, says she feels some relief after marrying off one of her seven daughters just before funding cuts shuttered her school and thousands of others across Bangladesh’s overcrowded refugee camps – leaving nearly half a million children without classrooms.

Her daughter, the second-born, was 16.

“Without school, girls sit idle. People start talking,” Begum said as her youngest tugged at her headscarf and four other daughters crowded around inside their bamboo shelter in Cox’s Bazar. “I was afraid. Marriage was the only option. I just pray her husband lets her study.”

With her husband battling mental health struggles, Begum asked that her full name not be used, fearing backlash for marrying off her child so young.

Bangladesh now shelters about 1.2 million Rohingya Muslims, roughly half of them children, most of whom fled a brutal military crackdown in Buddhist-majority Myanmar – a campaign U.N. investigators have called a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

Monday marks the eighth anniversary of that displacement, when more than 700,000 Rohingya crossed into Bangladesh in a matter of days, turning the area into the world’s largest refugee settlement.

But now, as the United States under President Donald Trump cuts nearly all international aid and despite a sharp rise in arrivals over the past 18 months, funding for the camps has been reduced.

The U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR, says it needs about $256 million to support the displaced Rohingya this year. That amount is the lowest in six years, but it has only received commitments for about 38% of the total.

Globally, UNHCR expects to receive just a third of the $10.6 billion it needs this year to assist a growing number of displaced people.

“This community has already lost everything and is now facing a severe funding shortfall that threatens their survival,” said Juliette Murekeyisoni, interim UNHCR representative in Bangladesh.

“Essential services and lifesaving assistance for the whole Rohingya refugee population are at risk of collapsing: critical food assistance, health services, essential cooking fuel, soap, and education will either stop or be severely disrupted without urgent additional support.”

UNICEF, which runs many of the Rohingya learning centers, said it suspended operations at more than 4,500 of its schools in June, leaving more than 227,500 Rohingya children without education and nearly 1,200 Bangladeshi teachers without work. Many Rohingya teachers are also without jobs.

Classes resumed in July for older students, but many bamboo-and-plastic classrooms remain deserted, doors locked and murals fading in the humidity.

Rohingya refugee children learn to recite the Koran at a Madrasa inside a refugee camp, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 17, 2025. (Reuters Photo)
Rohingya refugee children learn to recite the Koran at a Madrasa inside a refugee camp, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 17, 2025. (Reuters Photo)

“Now the kids just play in the mud or rain. They’re forgetting everything they once learned,” said Naser Khan, a Rohingya teacher. “Without education, they become blind. A lost generation.”

‘Snatched away’

In one of the refugee camp’s sweltering lanes, Mohammed Faruq trudges beneath the midday sun, calling out the names of his two young daughters. Once, the girls ran to school with tattered notebooks in hand. Today, they wander aimlessly between the camp’s bamboo shacks.

“The little bit of education our children could get was snatched away,” said Faruq, a father of six who fled Myanmar in 2017. “We survived genocide in Myanmar, we survived floods and fire here – but now our children’s future is being killed silently.”

For Faruq, the crisis feels unbearably personal.

“If our children cannot study, they will have no future. There is no way back to our homeland anytime soon, and here they have nothing,” he said.

Currently, no Rohingya child under age 12 in Cox’s Bazar has access to education, according to the International Rescue Committee, which estimates as many as 500,000 children are now missing out on learning.

The IRC says the reduction in humanitarian services is already having serious consequences: reported cases of child marriage have risen by 3% this year and child labor by 7% – figures that are likely underestimates due to limited monitoring and stigma.

“Each day, more families will continue to turn to extreme methods of survival: gambling, selling children into marriage and forced labor, as well as sexual abuse, will all rise,” said Hasina Rahman, the IRC’s Bangladesh director.

‘Burning children’s dreams’

UNICEF says “shifting global priorities” have led to the decrease in contributions.

“To stretch every dollar, we have reduced UNICEF staff, streamlined programs and cut costs wherever possible – but the needs far outweigh the resources available,” Rana Flowers, UNICEF representative to Bangladesh, told Reuters.

The UNHCR warns the funding crisis threatens to undo years of fragile progress. As violence in Myanmar continues, up to 150,000 Rohingya have arrived in Cox’s Bazar over the past 18 months, adding pressure to already strained services.

“I dreamed my students would become doctors or engineers. Now, with no classes, they will become nothing,” said Kafayat Ullah, a 45-year-old math teacher. “They burned our homes in Myanmar. Here, they are burning our children’s dreams.”

One of those dreams belongs to 9-year-old Nahima Bibi, who now spends her days playing in the camp’s muddy lanes with the other children. “If I don’t go to school, how will I ever become a doctor?” she said softly. “My heart feels sad.”

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