Irish Independent

‘Take Rohingya back ,’ demands Bangladesh PM

- Tofayel Ahmed

THE Bangladesh­i prime minister demanded yesterday that Myanmar allow the return of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who fled recent violence in the Buddhist-majority nation – a crisis she said left her speechless.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said Bangladesh would offer the refugees temporary shelter and aid, but that Myanmar should soon “take their nationals back.”

“We will not tolerate injustice,” she said at a rally at the Kutupalong refugee camp, near the border town of Ukhiya in Cox’s Bazar district.

On Monday night, she lambasted Myanmar for “atrocities” that she said had reached a level beyond descriptio­n, telling lawmakers she had “no words to condemn Myanmar”.

At least 370,000 Rohingya have flooded into Bangladesh since August 25, when Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts, prompting Myanmar’s military to retaliate with what it called “clearance operations” to root out the rebels.

The crisis has drawn sharp criticism from around the world. Yesterday, Iran’s supreme leader called the killing of Muslims a political disaster for Myanmar. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also called Myanmar’s leader, Aung San Suu Kyi (inset), a “brutal woman”, and urged other Muslim countries to “increase political, economic and commercial pressures” on the country to stop the violence. The UN human rights chief said Myanmar’s ethnic Rohingya minority was facing what “seems a textbook example of ethnic cleansing”. UN rights investigat­ors have been barred from entering the country. “The Myanmar government should stop pretending that the Rohingya are setting fire to their own homes and laying waste to their own villages,” Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said in Geneva, calling it a “complete denial of reality”. Meanwhile, a Rohingya villager in Myanmar said security forces had arrived on Monday in the village of Pa Din village, firing guns, setting new fires to homes and driving hundreds of Rohingya to flee. “People were scared and running out of the village,” the villager said, speaking on condition of anonymity out of fear for his safety. Myanmar police disputed that, saying the houses were burned by terrorists they called Bengalis. That term is used derisively by many in Myanmar to describe the Rohingya, who they say migrated illegally from neighbouri­ng Bangladesh, though many Rohingya families have lived in Myanmar for generation­s. Myanmar’s military said that Rohingya villagers helped them arrest six suspected Rohingya insurgents armed with swords and slingshots on Monday. The military commander in chief ’s office said yesterday on its Facebook page that the six alleged insurgents were detained as they entered Ka Nyin Tan village in Maungdaw township. In Bangladesh, Kutupalong and another pre-existing Rohingya camp were already beyond capacity. Bangladesh has said it would provide 2,000 acres for a new camp in Cox’s Bazar district to help shelter newly arrived Rohingya. The government was also fingerprin­ting and registerin­g new arrivals.

Some new arrivals were staying in schools, or huddling in makeshift settlement­s with no toilets along roadsides and in open fields. Basic resources were scarce, including food, clean water and medical aid.

Aid agencies have been overwhelme­d by the influx of Rohingya, many of whom are arriving hungry and trauma- tised after walking for days through jungles or being packed into rickety wooden boats in search of safety in Bangladesh.

Many tell similar stories – of Myanmar soldiers firing indiscrimi­nately on their villages, burning their homes and warning them to leave or die. Some say they were attacked by Buddhist mobs.

In the last two weeks, the government hospital in Cox’s Bazar has been overwhelme­d by Rohingya patients, with 80 arriving with gunshot wounds as well as bad infections.

At least three Rohingya have been wounded in land mine blasts, and dozens have

drowned when boats capsized during sea crossings.

Myanmar’s authoritie­s said more than a week ago that some 400 people – mostly Rohingya insurgents – had died in clashes with troops, but it has offered no updated death toll since.

Rohingya have faced decades of discrimina­tion and persecutio­n in Myanmar and are denied citizenshi­p despite centuries-old roots in the Rakhine region.

Before August 25, Bangladesh had already been housing some 500,000 Rohingya who arrived after bloody anti-Muslim rioting in 2012 or amid earlier persecutio­n drives in Myanmar.

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 ??  ?? Rohingya refugees jump from a boat in Dakhinpara, Bangladesh, as it tips over after travelling from Myanmar, as women break down and a young man carries an old woman. Photos: Getty
Rohingya refugees jump from a boat in Dakhinpara, Bangladesh, as it tips over after travelling from Myanmar, as women break down and a young man carries an old woman. Photos: Getty
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