The Borneo Post

Bangladesh seeks support for Rohingya relocation plan

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DHAKA: Bangladesh­i authoritie­s urged the internatio­nal community Sunday to back a controvers­ial plan to relocate tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar to a remote island despite warnings it is uninhabita­ble.

Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali called on representa­tives from 60 diplomatic missions and several United Nations agencies to take ‘meaningful measures’ to relocate the refugees.

The scheme would see the Rohingya resettled on Then gar Char island in the Bay of Bengal, where Ali said the displaced would have ‘ better access to humanitari­an assistance’.

Some 232,000 Rohingya Muslims — both registered and unregister­ed — were already living in Bangladesh before more than 65,000 others began arriving in October, fleeing violence in Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine. Most of those who fled to Bangladesh live in squalid conditions in refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar district, which borders Rakhine state and is home to the country’s biggest tourist resort.

Last week, Bangladesh establishe­d a committee comprised

The minister requested the ... UN and other internatio­nal partners to render their support in the implementa­tion of this relocation plan by providing assistance in developing the island and in transporti­ng the Myanmar nationals. Bangladesh Foreign Ministry statement

of state officials in coastal districts to oversee the plan, and ordered authoritie­s to help identify and relocate undocument­ed Myanmar nationals to the island.

One local official criticised the idea, saying the 6,000-acre island was ‘only accessible during winter and a haven for pirates’.

Bangladesh first mooted the idea of relocating the refugees in 2015 despite allegation­s that the island was still not ready for human habitation.

The idea sparked an outcry from Rohingya community leaders, while a UN agency said a forced relocation would be ‘very complex and controvers­ial’.

During Sunday’s meeting, Ali told officials the Rohingya would only be relocated to the island after the government finished building the necessary infrastruc­ture, including schools and roads.

“The minister requested the ... UN and other internatio­nal partners to render their support in the implementa­tion of this relocation plan by providing assistance in developing the island and in transporti­ng the Myanmar nationals,” read a foreign ministry statement, adding that the move was a ‘temporary arrangemen­t’.

“Bangladesh would like the internatio­nal community to take meaningful measures for repatriati­on of this population to their homes back in Myanmar,” the statement said.

Myanmar has long faced internatio­nal criticism for its treatment of the Rohingya, who are denied citizenshi­p and live in conditions rights groups have compared to apartheid. Since October the Myanmar army has carried out a military crackdown in the north of Rakhine state that the United Nations has said has likely killed hundreds.

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A Rohingya refugee carries water on his shoulder in the morning at Kutupalang Unregister­ed Refugee Camp, in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
— Reuters photo A Rohingya refugee carries water on his shoulder in the morning at Kutupalang Unregister­ed Refugee Camp, in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A community health care assistant performs a health check-up on a Rohingya refugee child at Kutupalang Unregister­ed Refugee Camp, in Cox’s Bazar.
— Reuters photo A community health care assistant performs a health check-up on a Rohingya refugee child at Kutupalang Unregister­ed Refugee Camp, in Cox’s Bazar.

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