New Straits Times

Temporary shelters for Rohingya returnees

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DHAKA: Rohingya refugees who return to Myanmar following a Bangladesh-Myanmar repatriati­on agreement will initially have to live in temporary shelters or camps, Dhaka said yesterday.

“Primarily they will be kept at temporary shelters or arrangemen­ts for a limited time,” Bangladesh Foreign Minister A.H. Mahmood Ali said.

The United Nations says 620,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since August and now live in squalor in the world’s largest refugee camp after a military crackdown in Myanmar that the UN and Washington said clearly constitute­s “ethnic cleansing”.

Bangladesh and Myanmar signed the repatriati­on agreement on Thursday, which would pave the way for an “earliest return” of the Rohingya refugees, according to the deal, which Dhaka released yesterday.

Under the agreement, Myanmar “would restore normalcy in Northern Rakhine (State) and to encourage those who had left Myanmar to return voluntaril­y and safely to their own households” or “to a safe and secure place nearest to it of their choice”.

“Myanmar will take all possible measures to see that the returnees will not be settled in temporary places for a long period of time and their freedom of movement in the Rakhine State will be allowed in conformity with the existing laws and regulation­s.”

Since most of the Rohingya villages were burnt during the violence, many would have no choice but to live in temporary shelters, minister Ali said.

“Most villages are burnt. So where they will return? There are no houses.

“Where they will live? It is not possible to physically (return to their houses),” he said.

The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees on Friday raised concerns over the agreement, saying “at present, conditions in Myanmar’s Rakhine State are not in place to enable safe and sustainabl­e returns”.

Rights groups have insisted that outside monitors were needed to safeguard the return of the Rohingya to Myanmar. Agencies

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Newly arrived Rohingya refugees climbing on a truck to get registered after crossing the border at a relief centre in Teknaf, Bangladesh on Thursday.
REUTERS PIC Newly arrived Rohingya refugees climbing on a truck to get registered after crossing the border at a relief centre in Teknaf, Bangladesh on Thursday.

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