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IOM will use it to expand attention to Rohingya and their host communities
Germany has contributed EUR 2 million to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) Covid-19 reaction in Bangladesh.
With this from Germany’s Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs, IOM will expand the provision of essential fitness facilities for force-displaced Rohingya and vulnerable members of the host network at Cox’s Bazar, and expand its capacity for the Bangladeshi government to build capacity. Cox’s Bazaar Entry Point to identify, evaluate and direct travelers with fitness issues.
The investment will also enable IOM to identify 3 isolation and rehabilitation centres, reuse a hundred medium-term shelters for covid quarantine and isolation of mild cases, and help a money-for-work program to strengthen the resilience of affected families in camps/settlement areas.
IOM will also identify 3 ambulance decontamination sites, coordinate ambulance shipments and provide non-public protective equipment (PPE) and education to network fitness personnel (ASCs) interested in locating contacts within refugee and host communities.
In addition, the investment will consist of the efforts of the Bangladeshi government at the ports of access, educational staff at the access point for the control of health-challenged travellers, the construction of detection and isolation facilities at Cox’s Bazar Airport and the offer of frontline staff at the access point with the compulsory apparatus and protective apparatus to maintain good sanitation. POE Amenities.
It will also support/facilitate a national OCB government convention to deal with foreign public fear fitness emergencies (USPPI).
Read – Rohingya camps report first Covid-19 case
“We are pleased to continue IOM’s reaction to Covid-19 in Bangladesh. Expanding the provision of an essential gym for Rohingya refugees and vulnerable members of the host network at Cox’s Bazar is essential to prevent the spread of the virus and treat and teach others accordingly,” said Peter Fahrenholtz, Germany’s ambassador to Bangladesh.
“We are grateful to the German government for providing emergency fitness to vulnerable communities, especially Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar, who are almost entirely humanitarian-aided,” said Giorgi Gigauri, head of mission in Bangladesh.
“This investment will allow us to continue developing the capacity of the Bangladeshi government in ports of access so that the government can take steps to prevent inflamed travelers from spreading the virus in their communities. Containment measures are so vital in Bangladesh, one of the world’s top densely populated countries,” Gigauri added.
In recent months, IOM and its partners have invited network leaders and devotees to participate in “Go and See” visits to build trust in recovery and quarantine facilities. Perceptions of the community influence the use of fitness facilities and realize the good luck of crisis interventions.
Since March, the IOM has built 3 treatment and isolation centers for severe acute respiratory infections (ICAT) (ICAR) for patients with Covid-19, with a total of 215 beds.
IOM has also modernized thirteen additional physical care facilities, expanded the Emergency And Referral Delivery Unit (RUD) for ambulances and referral to live beds, and provided more than 200,000 general fitness consultations in IOM-administered physical care centers (PHCCs). (HP) for refugees and host communities.
To save lives, the spread of accurate and reliable data is to prevent transmission and prevent the spread of the virus.
More than 1. 9 million sessions
Since March, IOM has trained network volunteers, organized more than 1. 9 million awareness-raising sessions and messages that aggregate data on protection, prevention, repair and quarantine.
At the beginning of the crisis, it has become transparent that if physical distance was demanded through governments around the world, it simply would not be painted in Cox’s Bazar, where families live so close to others.
IOM and its partners are mobilizing budget to build CTI so that inflamed members of the network can get the remedy they need and to renew/build quarantine services for potential contacts of proven cases involving the spread of the virus.
Bangladesh faces critical humanitarian desires and the Covid-19 crisis is compounded by the return of thousands of migrant employees who have lost their jobs as a result of the Covid-19 recession.
The immediate and large-scale return of migrant staff puts greater pressure on social and fitness systems that are already overloaded.
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Kazi Anis Ahmed, editor