The Borneo Post

EU’s top diplomat ‘encouraged’ by Rohingya talks with Suu Kyi

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YANGON: The EU’s foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini yesterday hailed ‘extremely encouragin­g’ talks with Aung San Suu Kyi on the Rohingya crisis, welcoming steps towards the repatriati­on of Muslims driven from Myanmar into Bangladesh.

But her optimistic tone appeared sharply at odds with the realities on the ground in a crisis that has seen 620,000 Rohingya flee rape, murder and arson in Myanmar’s Rakhine state since late August.

Deadly attacks by Rohingya militants on August 25 sparked a massive backlash from Myanmar’s security forces that the UN says may amount to ‘ethnic cleansing’.

Diplomatic pressure has been growing on Myanmar, especially on its Nobel Peace Prize-winning leader Suu Kyi.

In response the country has said it is ready and willing to take back refugees, if they can ‘verify’ they belong in Rakhine.

Mogherini, who visited refugee camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar over the weekend, emerged from Monday’s talks with Suu Kyi in a positive mood.

“I found it (the talks) extremely encouragin­g,” she told reporters in Myanmar’s capital Naypyidaw a t a meeting of Asian and European foreign ministers.

“I am very much encouraged by the possibilit­y — that I believe is real and concrete — of Myanmar and Bangladesh” reaching an agreement for the repatriati­on of refugees.

The two countries have yet to strike a binding deal on repatriati­on.

Rights groups say a speedy and safe repatriati­on of significan­t numbers of Rohingya is highly unlikely since large numbers are still fleeing violence, fear and hunger on a daily basis.

The status of the Muslim minority also remains highly emotive in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where they are denied citizenshi­p and labelled ‘Bengalis’, or illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

Rohingya villages have been razed and rice fields commandeer­ed or left to ruin, raising major questions over what they can return to. — AFP

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