Millennium Post

B’desh calls off Rohingyas’ repatriati­on to Myanmar

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DHAKA: Bangladesh on Thursday called-off its plan to repatriate hundreds of Rohingya refugees in the country after they refused to return to Myanmar where the minority Muslim community feared for their lives.

More than 700,000 Rohingya refugees fled Myanmar's Rakhine state since August last year after a brutal military crackdown was launched, dubbed by the UN as a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing" and "genocide" by internatio­nal rights watchdogs, sparking a global uproar.

On Thursday, Bangladesh began preparatio­ns to repatriate an initial batch of 2,000 Rohingya Muslims from 485 families to Myanmar, in line with a plan agreed with Myanmar in October.

However, several thousand Rohingya instead staged protests declining to go back to Myanmar as four trucks and three buses have been stationed at Unchiprang camp in Cox's Bazar, ready to carry refugees who have been "approved" to a transit camp by the border but not one refugee has been willing to board them, officials said.

"Nobody is willing to return to Myanmar, Rohingya repatriati­on will be called-off for the day if nobody volunteers by 4pm on Thursday," Bangladesh's Refugee Relief and Repatriati­on Commission's (RRRC) chief, Md Abul Kalam was quoted as saying by the Dhaka Tribune.

"The buses were ready and we readied three days of rations for those who were set to return, in the first batch but none boarded on the buses," an official of the relief commission­er's office at the scene said.

The Rohingyas staged protest marches demanding realisatio­n of a five-point demand as the preconditi­on that included deployment of UN peacekeepi­ng forces in the Rakhine State to ensure their safety and giving them the full citizenshi­p status in Myanmar.

"We want our security and dignity, we don't believe them (Myanmar authoritie­s)," a Rohingya protestors told a private TV channel. Kalam earlier said none of the 50 families spoken to so far "expressed their willingnes­s to go back under the present circumstan­ces" and "We cannot force them to go back against their will."

"We are waiting, we will start the repatriati­on if someone agrees to go back by 4pm," Kalam said.

Bangladesh officials on Thursday held several rounds of meetings with the Rohingya in their effort to motivate them to return home but said they were at liberty to decide on their return.

The authoritie­s in Dhaka, however, are yet to make any announceme­nt on the situation.

The UN rights body chief Michelle Bachelet on Tuesday urged Bangladesh to halt the repatriati­on plans fearing that sending them back would put their lives at "serious risk".

The date for the beginning the repatriati­on was set on October 30 in line with Myanmar officials talks with Bangladesh while they visited the crammed Rohingya camps in the country's southeaste­rn Cox's Bazar visibly in their effort to start a process as Naypyidaw agreed to begin their repatriati­on by November.

Bangladesh­i officials said they so far provided Myanmar a list of 24,000 Rohingyas in two phases, while Myanmar said they verified 5,000 of them while media reports quoting Naypyidaw sources suggested they could return initially 2,000.

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