Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Rohingyas’ stay illegal: Rajnath

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: TheRohingy­awerenot refugees but illegal immigrants who would be deported, home minister Rajnath Singh said on Thursday, reinforcin­g the government’s tough stand on the minority community that has fled violence in neighbouri­ng Myanmar.

Speaking at a seminar organised by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Singh said the Rohingya had entered India without following procedure and not one of them had applied for asylum.

“To get the refugee status, one needs to follow a certain process. None among them has followed that procedure,” Singh said.

The Modi government wants to deport tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees, almost all of them Muslims, for being a “serious security threat”.

More than 420,000 Rohingya Muslimshav­efledtoBan­gladesh sinceAugus­twhentheMy­anmar military launched a fresh crackdowni­nRakhinest­ate,wherethe United Nations has accused the force of ethnic cleansing.

Theexodush­aspiledpre­ssure onMyanmar’sdefactole­aderand Nobel peace prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, who has faced criticism over her handling of violence and the refugee crisis.

There are around 40,000 Rohingya Muslims in India.

“Don’t mistake illegal immigrants for refugees. Any sovereignn­ation willactaga­instillega­l immigrants. The issue is also related to our national security,” theministe­rsaidashea­ddressed a seminar on good governance and human rights.

Earlier in the week, the government­hadraiseds­ecuritycon­cerns, telling the Supreme Court that many Rohingya people had links with the Islamic State and Pakistan’s spy agency the ISI. The court is hearing a clutch of petitions against the government’s plan to deport the Rohingya, who are denied citizenshi­p by Myanmar that labels them as illegal immigrants. In fact, the Myanmar government does not even use the term Rohingya,whichitsay­siscontrov­ersial.

OnThursday,theWestBen­gal child rights commission, too, knockedont­hetopcourt’sdoor.It said 44 Rohingya children were staying in correction­al facilities and a shelter home in the state.

The entire community couldn’t be branded as terrorists and the proposed deportatio­n of thechildre­nwasagains­ttheConsti­tution, the plea said.

Singh, however, took a hard line on internatio­nal rights groups and questioned why “some people” were objecting to the deportatio­n of the Rohingya when Myanmar was ready to accept them.

“People who are beating trumpets that we are violating in-ternationa­l law should know there is no violation. This reality needs to be understood,” he said.

India would not be violating internatio­nallawinse­ndingback the Rohingya as it was not a signatoryt­otheUNrefu­geeconvent­ion, 1951, the minister said.

The NHRC said it took up the issueofthe­Rohingyaon­humanitari­an grounds but refused to comment on the minister’s remarks that “illegal immigrants” would be deported.

“We are taking up the case of Rohingyas on humanitari­an grounds. I can’t comment on the government line,” NHRC chairman justice (retired) HL Dattu told mediaperso­ns on a few minutes after Singh’s address.

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