Human Rights Watch reports that landslides in July 2026 in Rohingya refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, kill at least 17 people and displace more than 3,000. The group says expanding families live in bamboo and tarp shelters on steep, deforested hillsides that become especially dangerous during the monsoon. As additional Rohingya arrive from Myanmar, UNHCR has warned that overcrowded conditions increase risks of deaths and injuries from cyclones, floods, and landslides.

The Rohingya Coordination Platform says that between July 4 and July 9 there were 286 weather-related incidents affecting 26,119 refugees, including 95 landslides that displaced 4,307 people. It also reports partial damage to 2,809 shelters and destruction of 13, along with damage to facilities such as learning centers, water and sanitation infrastructure, retaining walls, pathways, bridges, and roads.

Human Rights Watch cites interviews and says some refugees—especially newly arrived people—lack formal shelter allocations and are reluctant or unable to relocate from high-risk areas. It also points to funding shortfalls and halted shelter safety plans. The report calls for reducing overcrowding and restoring funding for slope stabilization, drainage, access routes, and emergency relocation sites.