them, some almost flattened by the force of the storm. we spent the last week or so in the camps and aid agencies say the fiercely refugees had over the weekend about the storm are a reminder the wider vulnerability that this refugee population continues to face, more than 5.5 years since they arrived here. children here still do not have access to a formal education, no schools allowed in the camp, and this refugee population relies on aid to survive. the food aid they get from the un is going to be cut for the second time this year in june so refugees will have even less to survive on. it really is, the feeling here, that they are stuck in an endless cycle and they cannot return to myanmar because they say it is not safe to go back to a country which is run by the very army that these families fled in fear. bangladesh does not want them to stay here so they remain in these
of the refugees within the shelters to places they feel might be a little bit safer. so we re going to get off this beach now along with all the others as the weather gets worse in anticipation of cyclone mocha. earlier, the united nations refugee agency representative in bangladesh johannes van der klau told us about the preparations to mitgate the effects of cyclone mocha. we have been working around the clock the last days to be prepared for this landfall of the cyclone today, which might be one of the most severe we have seen in the last decade. so we need to be prepared for the worst. insofar we can be prepared because we look at the refugee population in the camps and consider that they live in very, very flimsy bamboo shelters which cannot
of the refugees within the shelters to places they feel might be a little bit safer. so we re going to get off this beach now along with all the others as the weather gets worse in anticipation of cyclone mocha. earlier, the united nations refugee agency representative in bangladesh johannes van der klau told us about the preparations to mitgate the effects of cyclone mocha. we have been working around the clock the last days to be prepared for this landfall of the cyclone today, which might be one of the most severe we have seen in the last decade. so we need to be prepared for the worst. insofar we can be prepared because we look at the refugee population in the camps and consider that they live in very, very flimsy bamboo shelters which cannot withstand a storm of this magnitude. but coming back to the preparations
Costa Rica has become a place where itinerant flows of people fleeing economic and political crises in Latin America mingle some staying, some moving on and women religious there have joined forces to respond.
you also have, according to the u.n., something like a third of the country was already in need of aid. there have been a number of conflicts all around sudan, and there is a refugee population in the country from that. plus, when you talk about the recent ravages of the farms by drought, et cetera, and now you have the aid agencies lyies lea the people who can deliver that aid. the situation only gets more di dire. you have sudan bordering so many nations, and you have refugees fleeing sudan to all directions here. what type of humanitarian crisis or crises are we talking about? you could have a cascade of crises that stretches across other borders. it is going to be hard to deliver aid. the other part that could happen is that these two generals also have different supporters within the region. the main army general in charge has strong ties with egypt. the head of the rsf militia has