There are moments when loss feels sudden, absolute, and deeply unfair. This is one of them.
A fire has destroyed our clinic inside the Rohingya refugee camp, a place we have supported and operated since 2019. What once stood as a trusted centre for healing is now reduced to ashes. Walls, equipment, medicine, years of service, gone in a matter of moments.
But the true loss goes far beyond a structure. What was taken away was access to care, safety for mothers, support for newborns, and relief for thousands who had nowhere else to turn.
For the Rohingya families living in the camp, this clinic was not optional; it was essential.
Every single day, 120 to 150 patients walked through its doors. Each month, that meant nearly 3,500 people receiving care they could not access anywhere else. Our medical team provided:
For many, this was their first time seeing a dentist. The first time a pregnancy was monitored safely. The first time, pain was treated with dignity.
This clinic was not just a service point; it was a place of reassurance. A reminder that someone had not forgotten them.
When the fire broke out, there was no warning. No time to save equipment. No way to protect medicine supplies. The clinic was completely burned down.
Today, where patients once waited for care, there is only smoke and debris.
The immediate impact is devastating:
In a refugee setting, there is no backup system. No nearby hospital. No alternative clinic. When one facility disappears, care disappears with it.
This is not a future project. It is not a long-term expansion plan.
This is an emergency response to a sudden and total loss.
Every day without this clinic puts lives at risk. Delayed care leads to complications. Missed vaccinations lead to outbreaks. Untreated infections become life-threatening. For mothers and newborns, the consequences can be immediate and irreversible.
We have the experience. We have the medical teams. We have the trust of the community.
What we urgently need now are the resources to rebuild.
(Some of the images from Rohingya camp)
To restart this clinic and bring essential healthcare back to the Rohingya camp, we need to raise USD 200,000.
This amount is carefully calculated to restore full operations:
This funding will allow us to reopen doors that were forced shut by tragedy, and once again serve thousands of patients every month.
We have stood with the Rohingya people since 2019. This clinic was built through years of effort, partnership, and trust. We know the needs. We know the urgency. And we are committed to restoring care as quickly and responsibly as possible.
But we cannot do this alone.
When you give, you are not donating to a building; you are restoring a lifeline. You are helping a mother receive prenatal care. A child receives a vaccine. A patient receives relief from pain.
You are helping us turn ashes back into hope.
The Rohingya camp clinic must be rebuilt, urgently. And with your support, it can be.
Donate today to our Global Emergency Relief Fund and help us restart this essential clinic. Every contribution brings us closer to reopening doors, restocking medicine, and welcoming patients back into care.
👉 Donate Now to Global Emergency Relief
👉 Help Rebuild the Rohingya Camp Clinic
Together, we can ensure that a moment of loss does not become a lasting tragedy.