Cape Breton Post

Myanmar takes back one Rohingya family

-

Myanmar has accepted what appears to be the first five among some 700,000 Rohingya Muslim refugees who fled to neighbouri­ng Bangladesh to escape military-led violence against the minority group, even though the United Nations says it’s not yet safe for them to return home.

A government statement said Saturday that five members of a family returned to western Rakhine state from the border area.

The statement said authoritie­s determined whether they had lived in Myanmar and provided them with a national verificati­on card. The card is a form of ID, but does not mean citizenshi­p — something Rohingya have been denied in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where they’ve faced persecutio­n for decades.

It said that the family was staying temporaril­y with relatives in Maungdaw town, the administra­tive centre close to the border.

The statement did not say if any more repatriati­ons are being planned. Bangladesh has given Myanmar a list of more than 8,000 refugees to begin the repatriati­on, but it has been further delayed by a complicate­d verificati­on process.

The two countries agreed in December to begin repatriati­ng them in January, but they were delayed by concerns among aid workers and Rohingya that they would be forced to return and face unsafe conditions in Myanmar.

Hundreds of Rohingya were reportedly killed in the recent violence, and many houses and villages burned to the ground. The United Nations and the U.S. have described the army crackdown as “ethnic cleansing.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada