Do No Harm in Refugee Humanitarian Aid: The Case of the Rohingya Humanitarian Response

Author(s)
Khaled, AFM.
Publication language
English
Pages
pp13
Date published
08 Mar 2021
Publisher
Journal of International Humanitarian Action
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Forced displacement and migration, Refugee Camps, Human Rights, humanitarian action, Humanitarian Principles, Protection, human rights & security
Countries
Myanmar, Bangladesh

The article broadly examines how humanitarian aid for Rohingya refugees inadvertently harmed poorer hosts and adversely affected local capacities for peace. The article also discusses possible ways of easing tension and improving social cohesion in the refugee-hosting areas, while also highlighting how policy- and mandate-related constraints hinder a humanitarian response anchored in the "Do No Harm" principle. Finally, the article concludes with the argument that the humanitarian agencies should not just limit themselves to identifying the unintended consequences and lapses in the intervention. Instead, the Do No Harm principle should lead humanitarian aid agencies to make an active effort to accept responsibility for the harm while taking all necessary steps to mitigate or avoid harming in future interventions.

Authors: 
Khaled, AFM.