Gulf Today

Rohingya repatriati­on plan poses ‘grave risks’

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Cox’sbazar:humanright­swatch(hrw)criticised sharply on Thursday a plan to return Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh to Myanmar, saying it poses “grave risks” to their lives and liberty.

Bangladesh is home to about a million Rohingya, most of whom fled a 2017 military crackdown in Myanmar that is now subject to a United Nations (UN) genocide investigat­ion.

The two countries are looking to return around 1,100 people in a pilot project in the coming weeks even though the UN has said repeatedly the conditions are not right.

“Bangladesh authoritie­s shouldn’t forget the reasons why Rohingya became refugees in the first place, and recognise that none of those factors have changed,” HRW said.

“Bangladesh is frustrated with its burden as host, but sending refugees back to the control of a ruthless Myanmar junta will just be seting the stage for the next devastatin­g exodus,” the group said in a statement. This month 20 Rohingya visited two resetlemen­t camps in Rakhine where the Myanmar junta plans to house them.

AFP spoke to several who were part of the visit and they expressed major misgivings, particular­ly followingt­hecyclone,whichhasde­vastatedra­khine.

“We are not ready to take a single step towards Myanmar. The arrangemen­t they made for us isn’t enough for our safety. We also have not got any justice for the persecutio­n done to us before,” said 38-year-old Hafiz Solaiman.

“We don’t trust the Myanmar government one percent.”

A second man, Ullah, who did not want to give his full name, said Myanmar’s army had made no atempt to save his relatives from Mocha.

“What they have built for us there has now been hit by the cyclone,” he added.

Mizanur Rahman, Bangladesh’s refugee commission­er, rejected any claims of coercing the Rohingya to return or not consulting them.

“The repatriati­on is voluntary,” Rahman said. “The HRW claim is untrue.”

About600,000rohingy­ainmyanmar’srakhine state are confined to squalid camps and villages that leave them vulnerable to extreme weather events such as the recent cyclone Mocha, it added.

That storm tore through Myanmar on Sunday and killed at least 81 people, according to statements given by local leaders and officials to AFP, as well as state media tallies.

At least 46 people died in the Rakhine state villages of Bu Ma and nearby Khaung Doke Kar, inhabited by the Rohingya, local leaders said.

Thirteen people were killed when a monastery collapsed in a village in Rathedaung township north of Rakhine’s capital Sitwe, and a woman died when a building collapsed in a neighbouri­ng village, according to Myanmar state broadcaste­r MRTV.

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