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World must step up Rohingya aid, head of UN food agency says

COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh -- The head of the United Nations' food-assistance agency on Sunday urged the international community to step up its support for the relief operation for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh or risk "a massive catastrophic disaster." 

More than half a million Rohingya Muslims have fled into Bangladesh in little more than a month to escape a Myanmar military operation that has been condemned as ethnic cleansing. The crackdown was in response to a series of deadly attacks on security posts by Muslim insurgents. 

"We have received bone-chilling accounts from those who fled -- mainly women, children and the elderly," U.N. Secretary-General António Guterress said last week. 

Authorities have housed the refugees in a number of existing camps near the border, but the huge numbers and the sheer speed of the exodus have created acute needs, including food. 

Some Rohingya fight back amid Myanmar ethnic cleansing 03:55

"Bangladesh alone can't handle this. The international community must rally," David Beasley, head of the U.N.'s World Food Programme, said after observing a handout of food to refugees at Kutupalong camp, near Cox's Bazar.

He said the WFP needs $75 million in the next five to six months to meet current and anticipated food needs.

"We need support from around the world because you're talking about a literal humanitarian disaster," Beasley said. "If we don't get the support we need, from health care to proper nutrition and safe water and sanitation and sheltering, this could explode into a catastrophic humanitarian disaster."

The WFP says it has already enrolled around 460,000 people in the camps in a program that gives them 55 pounds of rice every two weeks for the next six months. 

On Thursday, almost 90 human rights organizations called for urgent U.N. action on Myanmar, also known as Burma, CBS News' Pamela Falk reported.

Rohingya refugee Minara Begum, 18, holds her sick nine-day-old daughter
Rohingya refugee Minara Begum, 18, holds her sick nine-day old-daughter, in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, October 1, 2017. Begum said the last time she saw her husband was fifteen days ago, when they fled from their village in Myanmar when the army burned their home. CATHAL MCNAUGHTON/REUTERS

U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley, who has been outspoken on the issue said, "We have seen images of acts no person should ever have to endure. We have seen terrified women and children fleeing their homes, with only the clothes on their back."

"It should shame senior Burmese leaders who have sacrificed so much for an open democratic Burma," Haley said, "We cannot be afraid to call the actions of the Burmese authorities what they appear to be -- a brutal, sustained campaign to cleanse the country of an ethnic minority."

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