“It’s about giving people skills and making them self-sufficient,” he said.
“They are already amazing and very well-prepared but then you give them some tips and trivia to play with to re-energise them up and improve their skills, so that they can feel like they are giving more than what they are already giving.”
Mr Lugo added there are around three million people living in the camp who have been displaced from Myanmar and it has grown in a “very disorganised way”, so he was glad to help.
“You can see how people are living in small huts and the conditions are not very good, the services are very limited, but the people have a will to keep going, it is very inspiring,” he said.