The Phnom Penh Post

Dhaka delays Rohingya return

- Annie Baner and Redwan Ahmed

THE repatriati­on of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who fled violence in Myanmar will not begin as planned, Bangladesh said yesterday, with authoritie­s admitting “a lot of preparatio­n” was still needed.

Dhaka had been due to start the huge process on January 23, after agreeing a two-year time scale with Naypyidaw.

But Bangladesh’s Refugee Relief and Repatriati­on Commission­er Mohammad Abul Kalam announced yesterday there was much more work to be done.

“We have not made the preparatio­ns required to send back people from tomorrow. A lot of preparatio­n is still needed,” Kalam said.

Since August, around 688,000 Muslim Rohingya have escaped over the border into Bangladesh in the wake of a militaryle­d campaign in Rakhine state that the UN says amounted to “ethnic cleansing”.

They poured into ill-equipped and over-crowded camps, bringing with them harrowing tales of rape, murder and torture at the hands of Myanmar’s feared army or Buddhist mobs.

After a global outcry, which included criticism of Myanmar’s civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, the two countries agreed earlier this month the refugees would be returned to Myanmar, in a process they said would take around two years.

Rights groups and the UN have said any repatriati­on must be voluntary, with reports many Rohingya settlement­s have been burned to the ground.

Bangladesh has sought to assure the internatio­nal community that only those wishing to go back to their homelands in Rakhine state would be sent to Myanmar, and the process would involve the UN’s refugee agency.

But yesterday, refugee chief Kalam said transit centres still needed to be built, and work remained to be done on the “rigorous process” of approving lists of those entitled – and willing – to return to Myanmar.

“Without completing this, we cannot send these people back all of a sudden. This work is ongoing,” he said.

He gave no revised date for the operation, but said two sites near the border had been identified for possible transit sites.

Bangladesh was “very keen” for the process to begin as soon as possible, he said, but added much work was outstandin­g on Myanmar’s side including housing reconstruc­tion and safety arrangemen­ts. “Neither side is ready for the real movement to begin now,” Kalam said.

Angry protests

The repatriati­on deal covers more than 750,000 refugees who have fled since October 2016, but does not include the estimated 200,000 Rohingya who were living in Bangladesh prior to that, driven out by previous rounds of communal violence and military operations.

Refugees have protested against the prospect of return, with many saying that they fear the campaign of atrocities is not over in Rakhine.

Local authoritie­s in Cox’s Bazar yesterday stopped a rally of hundreds of protesters from marching on one large camp, with an organiser being held by the Bangladesh army, Rohingya leaders said.

In recent days refugees have gathered by the hundreds chanting slogans and holding banners demanding citizenshi­p and guarantees of security before they return to Rakhine.

Five senior Rohingya leaders met with UN special rapporteur Yanghee Lee in Cox’s Bazar district of Bangladesh late on Sunday and handed her a list of demands before repatriati­on would be considered.

“We do not want to go back home because we have not got our rights,” community leader Abdur Rahim, who met the visiting UN rapporteur during her tour of the camps, said.

Rohingya militants at the weekend said that the repatriati­on plan would trap the Muslim minority in long-term camps while their ancestral lands are seized.

Most refugees live in squalid camps in Cox’s Bazar but an estimated 6,500 are stranded in a so-called no man’s land between Bangladesh and Myanmar.

Kalam said Myanmar could take back these refugees “as a token of their seriousnes­s” about the agreement, as these Rohingya were not on Bangladesh­i soil and therefore not part of the official repatriati­on.

 ?? MUNIR UZ ZAMAN/AFP ?? A Rohingya refugee man carries bamboo, used as a building material, at Thankhali refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district yesterday.
MUNIR UZ ZAMAN/AFP A Rohingya refugee man carries bamboo, used as a building material, at Thankhali refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district yesterday.

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