The Borneo Post

Speed of Rohingya return is up to Bangladesh — Suu Kyi

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SINGAPORE: Aung San Suu Kyi said yesterday it was up to Bangladesh to decide how quickly Rohingya refugees would return to Myanmar, appearing to blame Dhaka for the delay.

More than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims fled Buddhist-majority Myanmar to Bangladesh after a brutal military crackdown on the stateless minority almost a year ago.

The two countries last November signed a deal to repatriate them but it has stalled. Many fear returning to a place where villages were burned to the ground and where they say security forces murdered, tortured and raped members of their communitie­s.

Bangladesh insists the Rohingya are on its soil temporaril­y but has not forced them back.

In rare public remarks on the crisis, civilian leader Suu Kyi said in a speech in Singapore that Myanmar has been ready to receive Rohingya returnees since Jan 23 as agreed in the memorandum of understand­ing.

“It’s very difficult for us to put a time frame on it by ourselves unilateral­ly because we have to work with Bangladesh in order to do that,” she told an audience in a lecture organised by the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute and entitled ‘Myanmar’s Democratic Transition: Challenges and Way Forward’.

“Bangladesh would also have to decide how quickly they want the process to be completed,” Suu Kyi added.

Since the repatriati­on was signed the two countries have wrangled over details, including the way refugees are described on ID cards in Bangladesh.

Rohingya living in the crowded camps over the border in Cox’s Bazar insist on safety guarantees and citizenshi­p rights before returning to Rakhine state in western Myanmar, where the United Nations says conditions are not ready for their return.

The US and UN have described the military’s campaign as ethnic cleansing and there is scepticism over whether Myanmar seriously intends to allow mass returns.

The crackdown against the Rohingya was sparked on Aug 25 last year when insurgents attacked police posts.

Calls have mounted for Myanmar’s military to be held responsibl­e for the campaign, in which thousands are estimated to have died, and the US has sanctioned two army brigades and several commanders who oversaw the expulsion.

But Myanmar says it was simply defending itself and bristles at internatio­nal calls for justice, arguing that the world does not understand the problem. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Suu Kyi (left) meets Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at Istana presidenti­al palace during a working visit in Singapore.
— AFP photo Suu Kyi (left) meets Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at Istana presidenti­al palace during a working visit in Singapore.

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