'Another 23,000 refugees living on steep slopes within the site could be at risk of landslides.' 'More than 85,000 refugees could lose their shelters,' the agency said. In a February press release, the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) warned that a risk analysis indicates that more than 100,000 refugees 'could be in grave danger from landslides and floods.' “It’s going to be a very, very challenging wet season. “It’s going to be landslides, flash floods, inundation,” Tommy Thompson, chief of emergency support and response for the World Food Program, told the New York Times. It is a site that was once forested but now lies barren, which only enhances the likelihood of catastrophic flooding. Scores of families who fled their Myanmar home in August live in makeshift structures on steep hillsides at the world's largest refugee camp. Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees living in southern Bangladesh are facing 'grave danger' as seasonal monsoonal rains that could trigger flooding and possible landslides loom on the horizon.