One Bengali-Muslim male has 4 wives and 30 children as they breed like wild animals. |
An agreement between the Bangladesh Family Planning Directorate (DGFP) and the UN agency signed on April 17 lays out 13 “areas of cooperation” in providing reproductive health and family planning information and services to the “Rohingya refugees and host communities in Cox’s Bazar district without discrimination and with dignity and respect.”
According to a copy of the agreement seen by The Irrawaddy, the agencies will adopt policies and guidelines for providing both short- and long-acting reversible contraceptive services, maternal health services, and record keeping and reporting, and will strengthen coordination and collaboration with agencies working with the host communities and refugees in Cox’s Bazar to ensure culturally sensitive quality healthcare information and services are provided without “discrimination, and with dignity and respect.”