“I woke up when my shelter caught fire,” explains Nur Bahar as she sits on the ground in what used to be her home. She escaped from Myanmar in 2017 after her husband was killed.
Pregnant at the time, she later gave birth to a boy, who is now almost seven years old. Around her the roof and walls are gone; she and her son are sitting on a carpet, surrounded by food and clothes donated by other community members. “Without a husband or family, I have no one to take care of me. I rely on food donations and hope to find someone to help me rebuild my shelter.”
The situation is just as difficult for those who have families. Anuhara, 67, is surrounded by her relatives. She usually lives here with her two sons and daughter-in-law, but the latter gave birth to a baby just two days before the fire and had moved to another area of the camp. Where other relatives are also living, which might have saved her. As we speak, her two sons and other family members are building a bamboo shelter. Anuhara lost everything but what she was wearing. “My clothes are the only possession I saved.”