The Free Press Journal

MYANMAR MUST TAKE BACK ROHINGYAS IN BANGLA DESH: INDIA

- AGENCIES

Return of displaced persons can restore normalcy in Myanmar: Swaraj on Rohingya crisis Dhaka India is "deeply concerned" at the spate of violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State where normalcy will be restored only with the return of "displaced persons", External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Sunday said here amidst the raging Rohingya refugee crisis. Nearly 600,000 minority Rohingya Muslims have fled to Bangladesh since late August to escape violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State where the army has launched a crackdown against militants. Myanmar doesn't recognise Rohingya as an ethnic group and insists that they are Bangladesh­i migrants living illegally in the country. Bangladesh has sought India's "sustained pressures" on Myanmar for its resolution. "India is deeply concerned at the spate of violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State," Swaraj said after talks with the Bangladesh­i side as part of the fourth Joint Consultati­ve Commission. She, however, preferred not to use the word "Rohingya" and said "we have urged that the situation be handled with restraint, keeping in mind the welfare of the population". Swaraj is on a two-day visit to Bangladesh at the invitation of Foreign Minister Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali. "It is clear that normalcy will only be restored with the return of the displaced persons to Rakhine state. "The only long term solution to the situation in Rakhine State is rapid socio-economic and infrastruc­ture developmen­t that would have a positive impact on all the communitie­s living in the State," she said. Ali said Dhaka was "happy to be reassured that India would continue to support the humanitari­an cause related to Rohingyas in Bangladesh". "We further urged India to contribute towards exerting sustained pressure on Myanmar to find a peaceful solution to the including sustainabl­e return of all Rohingyas to their motherland," he said. India has committed to provide financial and technical assistance for identified projects to be undertaken in Rakhine State in conjunctio­n with the local authoritie­s, Swaraj said. "We have also supported implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions contained in the Kofi Annan-led Special Advisory Commission report," she said. Swaraj also mentioned India's response to the Rohingya crisis and said it launched the 'Operation Insaniyat' in September to support Bangladesh in its "commendabl­e efforts to provide shelter in Cox's Bazaar to lakhs of displaced persons who have fled from Rakhine State of Myanmar". She said that with this operation, India supplied essential requiremen­ts by way of parboiled rice, lentil, salt, sugar, cooking oil, tea, milk powder, mosquito nets and soap to about 300,000 displaced persons. Swaraj's comments came as foreign relations and security experts said that Bangladesh crucially needed Indian support along with that of China in overcoming the Rohingya crisis despite speculatio­ns about the equations of regional political and economic interests and extent of their role in this regard.

"I ndia is "deeply concerned" at the spate of violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State where normalcy will be restored only with the return of displaced persons,” SUSHMA SWARAJ/ Indian External Affairs Minister

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