Photo d'un enfant dans le camp de réfugiés au Bangladesh
Projects - 24 August 2018

ROHINGYA : HOW TO IMPROVE ACCESS TO INFORMATION AND SOCIAL COHESION ?

For more than 30 years, Bangladesh has been the second theater of the Rohingya crisis. Muslim minorities face repression and discrimination in their own country, Myanmar, resulting in their exile in Bangladesh, in the Cox’s Bazar region.

Since August 25th, 2017, more than 671,000 Rohingyas have crossed the border from Myanmar to Bangladesh, an extremely rapid humanitarian crisis. In March 2018, more than 880,002 refugees were in the country, and more than 200,000 Rohingyas who were already in Bangladesh following the various waves of exile. This new population is living in existing refugee camps, but also in overcrowded makeshift camps such as schools, community centers, religious buildings and family homes.

FOR A BETTER CONSIDERATION OF INTELLECTUAL NEEDS

We believe that reading, writing and access to information must be priorities for emergency assistance. To heal and rebuild, we must also be able to read and share one’s experience. Since 2010 in Haiti, Bibliothèques Sans Frontières intervenes on the grounds of humanitarian emergencies by militating for a better consideration of the intellectual needs – access to information, education, and cultural resources – of individuals in danger.

Faced with the situation in Bangladesh, Bibliothèques Sans Frontières has been in Bangladesh for an evaluation of needs and come up with a program to consolidate access to information, learning and cultural spaces in response to the Rohingya crisis. In order to learn more about a first potential response plan devised by BSF following its meetings with local partners, please click on the link below :

READ THE ASSESSMENT MISSION REPORT !

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Burundi, 2019

Burundi : “The Street Has not Always Been My Home”

Medias - 3 March 2020

In Burundi 400,000 children and adolescents do not have access to quality education, especially refugees those in poverty, ​and those displaced. Among them, 5,000 children are in situations of homelessness. This autumn our sponsor Augustin Trapenard will meet for a week – in the surrounding neighborhoods of Bujumbura – the young users of our Ideas [...]

NOTES FROM THE PANDEMIC: THE RESILIENCE OF ROHINGYA REFUGEES

Projects - 13 January 2021

The Covid-19 pandemic has made the question of access to quality health information vital, especially among communities in already vulnerable circumstances.  Since March 2020, in the refugee camps of Rohingya in Bangladesh, Libraries Without Borders (LWB)  has organized activities to inform and help prevent the spread of the virus, as well as workshops to fight [...]