The Borneo Post (Sabah)

The world must finally give us Rohingya a say in our fate

- By Mohammed Sheikh Anwar

BY NOW, the world is well aware of the horrors experience­d by Myanmar’s Rohingya minority over the past two years. Starting on Aug 25, 2017, the Myanmar military unleashed a campaign of terror against the Rohingya in the country’s western Rakhine state, compelling virtually the entire community to flee. Since then, more than 700,000 Rohingya have sought refuge in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh.

This week, according to an agreement between Bangladesh and Myanmar, the refugees are supposed to start going back. The problem: No one has ever asked us, the Rohingya, what we want. Once again our fate is being determined over our heads - without the slightest reference to our own desires. This must stop.

In reality, the so-called repatriati­on plan is nothing but a scheme designed to whitewash the Myanmar military’s crimes and to help it escape accountabi­lity. Under pressure from the internatio­nal community, the Myanmar government is trying to show its eagerness to take refugees back from Bangladesh - but without fulfilling our demands for equal rights and security.

Myanmar is highly unlikely to return the refugees to their homes. Most Rohingya villages were burned down by the Myanmar military during its campaign of genocidal violence. For that reason, those who return are apparently to be resettled in internment camps. Some observers worry this is tied to Chinese-backed economic projects that have been planned on the emptied Rohingya lands in the region.

Unsurprisi­ngly, virtually no Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh or anywhere else are willing to go back to Myanmar and live in these concentrat­ion camps. The Myanmar government has tricked some into believing that life in the camps will be temporary, until they can be allowed to return to their villages once they are rebuilt. The government spreads this false hope through collaborat­ors (who are sometimes Rohingya themselves) as well as through some internatio­nal agencies who act as brokers for the Myanmar government and aid agencies seeking to gain contracts in Rakhine state. Both the Rohingya and the internatio­nal community have succumbed to such trickery many times before. The problem is compounded by the lack of independen­t media access to the areas concerned. If the refugees are sent back, the crisis will fade away from the internatio­nal spotlight. And this will allow the familiar cycle of violence and injustice to begin again.

The Rohingya should only return to Myanmar once our conditions have been fulfilled. Our demands are straightfo­rward. The government must restore our citizenshi­p and our status as an indigenous group - a status that will ensure us equal rights. Returnees from Bangladesh, as well as those who have been internally displaced in Rakhine state since June 2012, should be resettled only in their original villages. The resettled areas should be provided with internatio­nal protection to ensure that the perpetrato­rs, including the Myanmar military, are never again able to commit such crimes against us. There are, after all, no guarantees that Bangladesh will open its borders to save Rohingya lives next time around.

In the meantime, the internatio­nal community must end the culture of impunity by bringing the perpetrato­rs namely the Myanmar military and responsibl­e government officials - to justice. It should follow the recommenda­tions of the UN Human Rights Council’s fact-finding mission on Myanmar and criminally investigat­e and charge them with crimes against humanity and genocide.

My family knows of what I speak. On Sept 12, 2017, the Myanmar military and Rakhine extremists attacked my village in southern Maungdaw Township and burned the whole village down, forcing my elderly parents and others in the family to flee to Bangladesh.

Sadly, there is nothing new about these atrocities. Since the late 1970s, successive regimes have pursued a policy of slowburnin­g genocide against the Rohingya. Violence against us has been perpetrate­d under different pretexts for the past four decades.

On Sept 1, 2017, Sr. Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the Myanmar army’s commander in chief, described the clearing of the Rohingya as “unfinished business” from World War II, referring to a period during the war when ethnic Rakhine and Burmese Buddhists who sided with the advancing Japanese forces clashed with the Muslim Rohingya. The general’s statement shows the deep roots of the Myanmar government’s policies of exterminat­ion of the Rohingya.

 ??  ?? (Left) Rohingya refugee children play in a playground in the Thangkhali refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar. • (Right) Rohingya refugees labourers wait to collect their daily wages after working in a road constructi­on site at the Kutupalong refugee camp in Ukhia, in Bangladesh. — AFP photos
(Left) Rohingya refugee children play in a playground in the Thangkhali refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar. • (Right) Rohingya refugees labourers wait to collect their daily wages after working in a road constructi­on site at the Kutupalong refugee camp in Ukhia, in Bangladesh. — AFP photos

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