The Free Press Journal

Rohingyas’ repatriati­on to Myanmar postponed

- AGENCIES/Dhaka

The Bangladesh authoritie­s on Monday said they would not initiate the repatriati­on of Rohingyas within the stipulated period agreed with Myanmar two months ago, on the grounds that preparatio­ns for the refugees' return have not yet been completed.

Both the countries signed an agreement on November 23 to start the repatriati­on of the more than 688,000 Rohingyas who have arrived in Bangladesh since last August within two months.

Bangladesh­i Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque said that the process would not begin on Tuesday as it had been agreed, Efe news reported. Bangladesh's Refugee Relief and Repatriati­on Commission­er, Abul Kalam, said that there was still much work to be done before the process could begin."We are busy in preparatio­n. Initially, we have to build some physical infrastruc­ture, a transit camp and we have to prepare the list based on family and village. These works are in progress," Kalam said.

He said that Myanmar would be informed once those preparatio­ns were complete and that the process would only begin once the Myanmar authoritie­s had verified the informatio­n. "Myanmar also has a lot of things to do to ensure a safe repatriati­on," he added. Kalam, a member of the Joint Working Group in charge of the process, did not specify a time frame for the start of the repatriati­on. On Sunday, the Bangladesh Foreign Ministry said that the UN High Commission­er for Refugees would be involved to ensure that the process is voluntary. The UNHCR spokespers­on in Cox's Bazar, the eastern Bangladesh­i district where the Rohingya refugee camps are located, said he had no knowledge of when the process would begin.

The current crisis erupted on August 25 following an attack by a Rohingya insurgent group that led to a violent response by the Myanmar Army in the state of Rakhine, where it is calculated that around 1 million Rohingyas lived, reports IANS. Members of the mostly Muslim minority community are not recognised by Myanmar's authoritie­s, who consider them Bengali migrants, and refuse to grant them citizenshi­p.

The UN and various human rights organisati­ons have said there is clear evidence of rights abuses in Myanmar with the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights calling the Army's operations "ethnic cleansing" and saying there were indication­s of "genocide".

Members of the Muslim minority community are not recognised by Myanmar's authoritie­s, who consider them Bengali migrants, and refuse to grant them citizenshi­p

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