NGO Work: Rohingya: NGO_ROHINGYA_2018__10

COX'S BAZAR, BANGLADESH - JANUARY 19:  Asma cooks on January 19, 2018 in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Asma came from Buthidaung township in Burma. The military torched the houses in her village and killed her husband. She walked for 7 days to Bangladesh, carrying her two children, while she was 6 months pregnant. She gave birth in a shack in the jungle 5 days after she arrived in Bangladesh. In the refugee settlement of Balukhali, over 116 widows and orphans have found shelter within a dense settlement of 50 red tents where no men or boys over the age of 10 years old are allowed. More than 655,000 Muslim Rohingya have crossed the border into Bangladesh since August last year, when they fled Rakhine state after the Myanmar military launched a brutal crackdown which was described by the United Nations as {quote}ethnic cleansing{quote}. Women and girls reportedly make about 51 percent of the distressed and traumatized Rohingya population in the refugee camps and face a high risk of being victims of human trafficking and sexual abuse, while adolescent girls aged between 13 and 20 risk getting involved in  forced marriages. Many of the Rohingya women travelled alone after their husbands had been killed or taken away during the attacks on Rohingya villages as many continue to fear returning home due to the lack of security guarantees. (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)

COX'S BAZAR, BANGLADESH - JANUARY 19: Asma cooks on January 19, 2018 in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Asma came from Buthidaung township in Burma. The military torched the houses in her village and killed her husband. She walked for 7 days to Bangladesh, carrying her two children, while she was 6 months pregnant. She gave birth in a shack in the jungle 5 days after she arrived in Bangladesh. In the refugee settlement of Balukhali, over 116 widows and orphans have found shelter within a dense settlement of 50 red tents where no men or boys over the age of 10 years old are allowed. More than 655,000 Muslim Rohingya have crossed the border into Bangladesh since August last year, when they fled Rakhine state after the Myanmar military launched a brutal crackdown which was described by the United Nations as "ethnic cleansing". Women and girls reportedly make about 51 percent of the distressed and traumatized Rohingya population in the refugee camps and face a high risk of being victims of human trafficking and sexual abuse, while adolescent girls aged between 13 and 20 risk getting involved in forced marriages. Many of the Rohingya women travelled alone after their husbands had been killed or taken away during the attacks on Rohingya villages as many continue to fear returning home due to the lack of security guarantees. (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)