Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Fate of jailed Rohingyas in the Northeast hangs in the balance

- Priyanka Deb Barman and Sobhapati Samom letters@hindustant­imes.com

AGARTALA/IMPHAL: Four Rohingya Muslims, caught entering Tripura illegally in June, were sent to a protective home in state capital Agartala last week.

They were presumed to be Bangladesh­is before the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) establishe­d their identity.

The four — Jabeda Khatun, 50, and her son Mohammad Tareq, 20, Syed Karim, 35, and his wife Fatema Akhter, 21 — were arrested from Teliamura railway station in Khowai district on June 9.

They claimed they were from Cox’s Bazaar in Bangladesh but could not produce a passport or any other valid documents.

“We had arrested them for violating two rules pertaining to passport and sent to police custody in Khowai. A local court later prescribed two months’ imprisonme­nt for them,” a senior police officer said.

The four were to have been pushed back to Bangladesh on August 9 but an emailed letter from UNHCR on August 8 informed the state administra­tion that they were Rohingyas, and had fled from Myanmar.

Among the four, Syed Karim was identified as a refugee under the UNHCR mandate and also had a refugee card.

The sudden change in the situation made the government shift the four to Mahatma Gandhi Protective Home in Agartala’s Narsingarh area on September 15.

Officials said they would deal with the four Rohingyas according to what the Centre decides about 40,000 other such refugees elsewhere in India.

The ruling Left Front in Tripura, though, does not favour the deportatio­n of the Rohingyas from the state, particular­ly Fatima who is five months pregnant.

Manipur too is facing a dilemma over 25 Rohingya Muslims, arrested over several years for trespass, lodged in the state’s jails.

Fifteen of these 25 have already served their jail terms and are awaiting deportatio­n.

“The jailed Rohingyas are a serious issue for us. And in view of the crackdown in Myanmar, we have sounded an alert to ensure they do not infiltrate,” Manipur chief minister Nongthomba­m Biren said.

SUSHMA MEETS HASINA

External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj on Tuesday paid a courtesy call on Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

“The meeting ... was more in the nature of a courtesy meeting. The issue of Rohingya did not come up ...” ministry spokespers­on Raveesh Kumar said.

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