Home WebMail
| Calgary 0.4°C
Regions Advertise Login Contact
Action News Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Canada
  • US
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Breaking
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • Breaking
  • Latest
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • What’s Iran’s 10-point peace plan that Trump says is ‘not good enough’?
  • Taiwanese opposition leader to meet China’s Xi in a test of diplomatic skill
  • Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid: Champions League – team news, start, lineups
  • Videos capture shooting near Israeli consulate in Istanbul
  • US-Israeli attacks on Iran are ‘clear and obvious war crimes’
  • Can Africa tackle the oil shock from the Iran war?
  • In Ghana Town, a ‘stateless’ future for hundreds born and raised in Gambia
  • Vinicius hails Lamine Yamal for condemning anti-Muslim fan chants
  • Palestine weekly wrap: Protests sweep West Bank after death penalty law
  • ‘Dying of thirst’: Inside Gaza’s al-Mawasi water crisis
  • How US, Israel are waging a war on Iranian culture, education
  • Iranian missile strike damages cars and street in Israel
  • ‘US-Israel playing Russian roulette with security of the region’
  • Ukraine, Russia kill several civilians in tit-for-tat attacks
  • Taiwan’s gender row boxer Lin takes bronze medal at Asian championships
  • Three killed in shooting near Israeli consulate in Turkiye’s Istanbul
  • US-Israeli strikes destroy buildings in northern Iran
  • USA striker Patrick Agyemang ruled out of World Cup due to injury
  • Los Angeles Stadium workers urge FIFA to bar ICE from World Cup
  • ‘Military action is not an effective means to pursue nonproliferation’
  • Trump and Hegseth invoke God and religion in Iran war press conference
  • Iran releases on bail Japan national jailed amid antigovernment protests
  • Synagogue in Tehran ‘completely destroyed’ in US-Israeli attack
  • Lebanese firefighters respond to aftermath of Israeli strike
  • What is driving the Houthis’ decision-making on joining the Iran war
  • What’s Iran’s 10-point peace plan that Trump says is ‘not good enough’?
  • Taiwanese opposition leader to meet China’s Xi in a test of diplomatic skill
  • Barcelona vs Atletico Madrid: Champions League – team news, start, lineups
  • Videos capture shooting near Israeli consulate in Istanbul
  • US-Israeli attacks on Iran are ‘clear and obvious war crimes’
  • Can Africa tackle the oil shock from the Iran war?
  • In Ghana Town, a ‘stateless’ future for hundreds born and raised in Gambia
  • Vinicius hails Lamine Yamal for condemning anti-Muslim fan chants
  • Palestine weekly wrap: Protests sweep West Bank after death penalty law
  • ‘Dying of thirst’: Inside Gaza’s al-Mawasi water crisis
  • How US, Israel are waging a war on Iranian culture, education
  • Iranian missile strike damages cars and street in Israel
  • ‘US-Israel playing Russian roulette with security of the region’
  • Ukraine, Russia kill several civilians in tit-for-tat attacks
  • Taiwan’s gender row boxer Lin takes bronze medal at Asian championships
  • Three killed in shooting near Israeli consulate in Turkiye’s Istanbul
  • US-Israeli strikes destroy buildings in northern Iran
  • USA striker Patrick Agyemang ruled out of World Cup due to injury
  • Los Angeles Stadium workers urge FIFA to bar ICE from World Cup
  • ‘Military action is not an effective means to pursue nonproliferation’
  • Trump and Hegseth invoke God and religion in Iran war press conference
  • Iran releases on bail Japan national jailed amid antigovernment protests
  • Synagogue in Tehran ‘completely destroyed’ in US-Israeli attack
  • Lebanese firefighters respond to aftermath of Israeli strike
  • What is driving the Houthis’ decision-making on joining the Iran war
Rohingya mothers and babies: Hungry and traumatised

Rohingya mothers and babies: Hungry and traumatised

Mothers recount giving birth as they fled, their children crying in hunger and their fears over long-term trauma.

By Al Jazeera Published 2017-09-28 05:14 Updated 2017-09-28 05:14 3 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Rohingya

Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh – Twenty-year-old Sameron was anticipating the birth of her second child, due in just a few days when the Myanmar army attacked her village and started indiscriminately killing villagers.

Members of the persecuted Rohingya community, Sameron, her husband, Anwar, and their three-year-old daughter, Sabiha, fled their home in Rajarbill in Myanmar’s Rakhine state. It was August 25.

Heavily pregnant, Sameron ran and walked through the night with her family.

“In the morning, we reached a village named Itella,” she recalls. “The village was deserted after the army had attacked it.”

They found an abandoned house with enough food items inside it to sustain them for five days. 

But then the army came again. “We escaped,” says Sameron. 

The next stage of their journey was the hardest. The family walked for an entire day and night without any food or water. 

“I don’t even want to think about that pain,” she says. “I had constant pain in my stomach and I was feeling sick. In the middle of this journey, I started having unbearable pain in my stomach and I would sit down and crouch in an effort to reduce it. I had gone into labour.”

Tears well in her eyes as she recalls it. 

“It was the most terrifying phase of my life. I somehow would keep breathing and walking. My husband would carry me and then carry my daughter, who had also started crying from the pain of walking. We were all weeping from pain, desperation and hunger.”


 MORE: Rohingya refugees search for shelter in Bangladesh


The family eventually reached the village of Mongni Para. There were still people living there and some of the old women helped to deliver Sameron’s baby. 

“We had to leave this village after five days. I was in no condition to walk but I somehow managed to reach a place from where we got on a boat to enter Bangladesh by crossing the Naf River. We had to pay 650,000 Kyat (around $477) to the boatman [for the rent of the entire boat]. He initially refused to take us because we didn’t have enough money, but some people helped us,” she says as she stands in a queue with her newborn daughter, waiting for medical treatment at a clinic that has been temporarily set up outside a mosque in the Bangladeshi port city of Cox’s Bazar. 

As a result of her strenuous journey and weak state, Sameron hasn’t been able to breastfeed her baby, who she has named Sadiha. “There was hardly any food for any of us as we walked for days. How would I produce enough milk to breastfeed my daughter?” she asks.

Many others are in a similar situation. 

Mayang Sari, a nutritionist with UNICEF, says “young mothers and children are the most vulnerable”.

“The extremely stressful and hard conditions have led to mothers and children becoming traumatised,” Sari adds. “This has made it difficult to breastfeed babies and this could become a bigger problem.”

Share this page

  • 𝕏 X/Twitter
  • 🔗 LinkedIn
  • 📘 Facebook
  • 💬 WhatsApp
  • ✉️ Email
Action News logo

Action News

A division of WestNet Continental Broadcasting

About

Part of WestNet N.A.

Action.News

Network

  • WestNet News
  • Advertise With Us
  • RSS Feed
  • Atom Feed

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Action News Code of Ethics
  • Editorial Policies
  • Corrections Policy

Connect

  • Facebook.com/ActionNews
  • YouTube
  • Twitch
  • WhatsApp
  • Submit a News Tip
  • Contact the Newsroom

© 2026 WestNet-HD, A Division of WN Continental Broadcasting. All Rights Reserved.

Action News™ and WestNet News are registered trademarks of WN Continental Broadcasting in the United States and Canada. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Home Breaking Canada Sports Search
🔴 LIVE
Action News Live ✖
🔊 Click to unmute