Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘India aims to deport Rohingya Muslims’

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

As far as we are concerned they are all illegal immigrants. They have no basis to live here. Anybody who is illegal migrant will be deported.

All of an estimated 40,000 Rohingya Muslims living in India are illegal immigrants, even those registered with the UN refugee agency, and the government aims to deport them, a senior government official said.

Junior interior minister Kiren Rijiju told Parliament last week that the Centre had directed state authoritie­s to identify and deport illegal immigrants, including Rohingya, who face persecutio­n in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) has issued identity cards to about 16,500 Rohingyas in India that it says help them “prevent harassment, arbitrary arrests, detention and deportatio­n”.

But Rijiju, a high-profile minister in PM Narendra Modi’s government, said in an interview on the weekend that the UNHCR registrati­on was irrelevant.

“They are doing it, we can’t stop them from registerin­g. But we are not signatory to the accord on refugees,” he said.

“As far as we are concerned they are all illegal immigrants. They have no basis to live here. Anybody who is illegal migrant will be deported.”

The UNHCR’s India office said on Monday the principle of nonrefoule­ment – or not sending back refugees to a place where they face danger – was considered part of customary internatio­nal law and binding on all states whether they have signed the Refugee Convention or not.

The office said it had not received any official word about a plan to deport Rohingya refugees, and had not got any reports deportatio­ns were taking place.

The treatment of the roughly one million Rohingya in Myanmar has emerged as its most contentiou­s human rights issue as it makes a transition from decades of harsh military rule.

The Rohingya are denied citizenshi­p in Myanmar and classified as illegal immigrants, despite claiming roots there that go back centuries, with communitie­s marginalis­ed and occasional­ly subjected to communal violence.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have fled from Myanmar, with many taking refuge in Bangladesh, and some then crossing a porous border into Hindu-majority India.

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