 For more videos on people's struggles, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. The Bangladeshi government dispatched yet another batch of Rohingya refugees to a remote island prone to floods. Six vessels scanning around 1,800 refugees left Chhattogram early on Tuesday, December 29 to the island of Bhasanchar. Bhasanchar, located in the Meghna river's estuary, is 40 miles away from the mainland. On December 4, the first batch of 1,600 refugees were relocated to the island. The island is said to have emerged from the sieges 20 years ago and is prone to flooding. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi has raised concerns about the safety of the refugees and the allegations of their forced relocation after the first group was sent to the island. The Bangladeshi government claims that the shift to the island is voluntary and preparations were made to tackle flooding and other potential disasters before moving the refugees. The government also claims to have built a 12-kilometer embankment to protect the island from flooding during high tide. It says it has built houses for over 100,000 people with all basic amenities. Bangladesh has over 1.1 million Rohingya refugees living in different camps in the country. Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh are living in rudimentary conditions. With 40,000 people per square kilometer, the refugee camps are one of the most crowded places on earth. Respiratory diseases and diarrhea is very common among the refugees. Nearly half of the Rohingya children don't have access to formal education according to reports. Rohingyas were forced to flee from their homes in Myanmar's Rakhine province due to state-sponsored persecution and attacks against them. In the name of fighting separators, groups, the Myanmar army attacked Rohingya villages and burned their houses, forcing millions to flee across the border to Bangladesh and other countries. The UN has accused the Myanmar army of carrying out genocide against Rohingyas.