The Jerusalem Post

Aid agencies fear for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh’s island relocation plan

- • By JARED FERRIE

PHNOM PENH (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Bangladesh has failed to persuade aid agencies to sign up to its plan to move 100,000 Rohingya refugees to a remote island in June, internal documents show, amid fears they could be trapped there at the mercy of cyclones, floods and human trafficker­s.

Hundreds of thousands of refugees from neighborin­g Myanmar are living in crowded camps in Cox’s Bazar District where they are threatened by flooding, disease and landslides with the monsoon season scheduled to start in the coming weeks.

The government of Bangladesh has for months been developing Bhasan Char island as an alternativ­e location. It has not, however, allowed aid agencies to view conditions, and officials failed during an April 4 briefing to convince them it was safe.

The Inter Sector Coordinati­on Group, which oversees the camps in Cox’s Bazar under the leadership of the humanitari­an agencies’ Strategic Executive Group, expressed deep caution about the plan.

“Basic questions of the island’s habitabili­ty remain unanswered,” the Inter Sector Coordinati­on Group said in an April 10 paper, which has not previously been made public.

“Given the incomplete­ness of informatio­n shared by the government, the Strategic Executive Group should avoid the appearance of premature endorsemen­t of the island as a viable alternativ­e,” it said.

About 700,000 refugees have crossed into Bangladesh since Rohingya insurgents attacked state security forces on August 25, sparking a military crackdown. Myanmar has repeatedly rejected evidence that its soldiers targeted civilians.

Aid agencies are struggling to accommodat­e the refugees, and a March assessment by the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR said 203,000 people at risk of floods and landslides in the largest camp should be relocated.

In their April 4 briefing, however, Bangladesh officials said that “land is very scarce,” and “no suitable land is available nearby” the existing camps.

Bhasan Char, which means Floating Island, emerged over the past two decades from sediment built up at the mouth of the Meghna River. The government has budgeted $280 million to turn it into a permanent landmass and a temporary home for refugees.

Slides from the government presentati­on, seen by the Thomson Reuters Foundation, noted that 120 cyclone shelters would be built, along with 13 kilometers of embankment­s to protect the island from flooding and being washed away.

A summary of the April 4 briefing by Canada’s mission to Bangladesh said work was expected to be sufficient­ly completed by the end of May, and 100,000 refugees brought there in June.

In an internal report after the presentati­on, UNHCR said it remained concerned about whether “proper cyclone and flood preparedne­ss measures” had been put in place, among other risks.

“The concentrat­ion of a vulnerable population in a restricted environmen­t may lure traffickin­g networks and extremists to prey on refugees,” said UNHCR.

Its report also expressed concern that refugees would not be given a “free and informed choice” to relocate to the island, which might then constitute “arbitrary detention.”

The slides – which were presented to humanitari­an agencies and diplomats – showed the government is also building office facilities for aid organizati­ons, along with accommodat­ion for refugees and security personnel.

Bangladesh has asked the United Nations to “support the relocation” to Bhasan Char, said Fiona MacGregor, a spokeswoma­n in Cox’s Bazar for the UN migration agency IOM.

“We are now in discussion over technical details, trying to better understand the conditions,” she said in an email.

 ?? (Hannah McKay/Reuters) ?? ROHINGYA REFUGEES walk next to paddy fields after fleeing from Myanmar into Palang Khali, near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
(Hannah McKay/Reuters) ROHINGYA REFUGEES walk next to paddy fields after fleeing from Myanmar into Palang Khali, near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.

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