The Jerusalem Post

Returning Rohingya may lose land and crops under Myanmar plans

Returnees to be kept in temporary camps first, then be moved to controvers­ial ‘model villages’

- • By SIMON LEWIS, THU THU AUNG and KYAW SOE OO (Adnan Abidi/Reuters)

SITTWE, Myanmar (Reuters) – Rohingya Muslims who return to Myanmar after fleeing to Bangladesh are unlikely to be able to reclaim their land and may find their crops have been harvested and sold by the government, according to officials and plans seen by Reuters.

Nearly 600,000 Rohingya have crossed the border since August 25, when coordinate­d Rohingya insurgent attacks on security posts sparked a ferocious counteroff­ensive by the Myanmar army.

The UN says killings, arson and rape carried out by troops and ethnic Rakhine Buddhist mobs since late August amount to a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya.

Civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who has no control over the military, has pledged that anyone sheltering in Bangladesh who can prove they were Myanmar residents can return.

Reuters has interviewe­d six Myanmar officials involved with repatriati­on and resettleme­nt plans. While the plans are not yet finalized, their comments reflect the government’s thinking on how Suu Kyi’s repatriati­on pledge will be implemente­d.

Jamil Ahmed, who spoke to Reuters at a refugee camp in Bangladesh, is one of many Rohingya who hope to go back.

Describing how he fled his home in northern Rakhine state in late August, Ahmed said one of the few things he grabbed was a stack of papers – land contracts and receipts – that might prove ownership of the fields and crops he was leaving behind.

“I didn’t carry any ornaments or jewels,” said the 35-year-old. “I’ve only got these documents. In Myanmar, you need to present documents to prove everything.”

The stack of papers, browning and torn at the edges, may not be enough, however, to regain the land in Kyauk Pan Du village, where he grew potatoes, chili plants, almonds and rice.

“It depends on them. There is no land ownership for those who don’t have citizenshi­p,” said Kyaw Lwin, agricultur­e minister in Rakhine state, when asked in an interview whether refugees who returned to Myanmar could reclaim land and crops.

Despite his land holdings, Myanmar does not recognize Ahmed as a citizen. Nearly all the more than one million Rohingya who lived in Myanmar before the recent exodus are stateless, despite many tracing their families in the country for generation­s.

Officials have made plans to harvest, and possibly sell, thousands of acres of crops left behind by the fleeing Rohingya, according to state government documents reviewed by Reuters.

Myanmar also intends to settle most refugees who return to Rakhine state in new “model villages,” rather than on the land they previously occupied, an approach criticized in the past by the UN as effectivel­y creating permanent camps.

The government has not asked for help from any internatio­nal agencies, who are calling for any repatriati­on to be voluntary and to the refugees’ place of origin.

Many refugees are fearful to return and are skeptical of Myanmar’s guarantees. Those who do decide to come back will first be received at one of two centers, according to government plans reviewed by Reuters, before mostly being relocated to model villages.

Internatio­nal donors, who have fed and cared for more than 120,000 mostly Rohingya in supposedly temporary camps in Rakhine since violence in 2012, have told Myanmar that they will not support more camps, according to aid workers and diplomats.

“The establishm­ent of new temporary camps or camp-like settlement­s carries many risks, including that the returnees and internally displaced persons could end up being confined to these camps for a long time,” said UN spokesman Stanislav Saling in an emailed response.

Satellite imagery shows that 288 villages, mostly Rohingya settlement­s, have been fully or partially razed by fires since August 25, according to Human Rights Watch.

Refugees say the army and Buddhist mobs were responsibl­e for most of the arson. The government says Rohingya militants and even residents themselves burned the homes for propaganda.

The hamlets where Rohingya farmers lived were “not systematic,” and so should be rebuilt in smaller settlement­s of 1,000 households set out in straight rows to enable developmen­t, said Soe Aung, permanent secretary at the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettleme­nt.

“In some villages there are three houses here, four houses over there. For example, there’s no road for fire engines when fire burns the villages,” Soe Aung said.

At the centers, officials said, the returnees will fill out a 16-point form that will be cross-checked with local authoritie­s’ records. Immigratio­n officials have for years visited Rohingya households at least annually for checks, photograph­ing family members.

For refugees who lost all their documents, the government will compare their photos to those that immigratio­n authoritie­s have on file, said Myint Kyaing, the permanent secretary at the Ministry of Labour, Immigratio­n and Population.

Officials will accept as evidence “national verificati­on” cards, handed out in an ongoing government effort to register Rohingya that falls short of offering them citizenshi­p. The card has been widely rejected by Rohingya community leaders, who say they treat lifelong residents like new immigrants.

“We are not going to go back like this,” said Mushtaq Ahmed, 57, a farmer from Myin Hlut village now living in the Tenkhali refugee camp in Bangladesh, where Jamil Ahmed is also staying.

“If I can go back to my house, and get my land back, only then I will go. We invested all our money into those paddy fields. They are killing so many of us with swords and bullets, and killing the rest of us like this.”

 ??  ?? A ROHINGYA refugee carries his mother on his back yesterday at a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
A ROHINGYA refugee carries his mother on his back yesterday at a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.

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