thousand row hanjour have left for bangladesh in recent weeks almost all of them have experienced great suffering. not big wanders through the refugee camp and cox s bazaar clearly traumatized the eleven year old tells us what happened in myanmar. my father was murdered by me and mary s soldiers thankfully i wasn t their neighbors had hidden me and then they brought me to bangladesh. janet is now searching for her mother she hopes she also made it to bangladesh jannat doesn t even have a tent she sleeps out in the open. more than half of the refugees here are children the relief organizations and the government of bangladesh aren t able to support them fully. everything is in short supply tents food and medicine there s just one hospital in the camp where
our every day nearly six hundred thousand rwanda have left for bangladesh in recent weeks almost all of them have experienced great suffering. not a big home wanders through the refugee camp in cox s bazaar clearly traumatized the eleven year old tells us what happened in myanmar. my father was murdered by me on mary s soldiers thankfully i wasn t there. neighbors had hidden me and then they brought me to bangladesh. is now searching for her mother she hopes she also made it to bangladesh doesn t even have a tent she sleeps out in the open more than half of the refugees here are children the relief organizations and the government of bangladesh aren t able to support them fully everything is in short supply tents food and medicine there s just one
services she needs. i mean, frankly, i wrote back to the association of immigration for that particular case because i was concerned. that s one of hundreds of thousands. so the international agencies need to step up in a significant and substantial way. what is so striking is that the people who survive what we ve already seen and talked about, their villages burning to the ground, the trek across the border. if they survive all that, then they end in one of these camps where there s not much food, not much water, perhaps not enough care. we were in cox s bazaar. you couldn t move around. and the conditions were atrocious. but also, this is a rwanda moment. this is a moment where ten years from now people will ask, what did you do? what action did you take? because these crimes are of enormous proportion. eric schwartz, i appreciate you joining us fresh off your flight from bangladesh where you ve been on the ground dealing with this situation.