World Cup 2018 grand event has ended. But his echo of excitement is still felt in the Rohingya refugee camp on the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.

Fever World Cup 2018 mainly felt the Rohingya children in the world's largest refugee camp, Kutupalong, Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. The flags of Brazil and Argentina are still flying between the red and green flags of Bangladesh, in a camp that houses nearly a million Rohingya refugees fleeing military violence in Myanmar.

For many Rohingya children refugees in Bangladesh, this 2018 World Cup was the first time for them. The joy and joy of watching the final on Sunday (15/7), seems to be coming to an end.

Rohingya boys carrying World Cup replica mini trophies ran down dusty little streets in the refugee camp. The young soccer fans were happy. Their eyes glittered and their faces beamed at the simple trophy as if it were original.

"My favorite team is Argentina.I watched the final game, Croatia and France, France continues to win," said Mohammad Reza, 6-year-old boy proudly showing off a blue and white local-made Lionel Messi jersey.

The youngest refugee, Nurul Afsar, who championed Brazil, jostled to see a mini cup placed in a small glass cabinet.

See also: Rohingya: At least We Have a Peaceful Place for Idul Fitri

Football fans watched the final match of a small television set in a tarpahed hut adjacent to an empty field where they play ball during the day.

Dozens of naked legs of the boys playing football shaded by the monsoon monsoon, dodging the ball while avoiding the muddy holes, then scored on goal bounded by wooden branches.

A hard kick from one of the players resulted in the ball drifting towards the hut area, but the referee rang his whistle to the older player.

Outside the flapping of the Spanish flag or the famous European club jersey, the football lovers in Bangladesh are split between supporters of Brazil or Argentina. A strange obsession in Bangladesh, infiltrating remote corners like the Kutupalong refugee camp inhabited by Rohingya refugees.

The rivalry between the two South American nations started since the 1986 World Cup, where the greatness of Diego Maradona brought victory to the Argentina team. As for football fans in Bangladesh, champion Brazilian football legend Pele.

Among the boys of all ages, there is a Neymar named. A child stands out with a bleached-hair style of the idol. Jahangir Alam has a style almost similar to the Brazilian team's attackers at least in the corner of the Rohingya refugee camp.

"I'm really amazed at Neymar, that's why I have a hairstyle like that.This match is very exciting," said a 17-year-old teenager wearing a Brazilian team uniform as he dashed his ball on a dusty field in a corner of the Rohingya refugee camp in Kutupalong, Bangladesh.


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