The Star Malaysia

Aid groups threaten to boycott new camps for Rohingya

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YANGON: Global aid groups warned Myanmar they would boycott any new camps for Rohingya returnees to Rakhine state, saying refugees must be allowed to settle in their original homes.

The joint statement, signed by more than a dozen humanitari­an organisati­ons including Save the Children and Oxfam, said the groups were “concerned” by recent announceme­nts that Myanmar would begin repatriati­ng Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh in two months.

More than 620,000 of the Muslim minority have fled into Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar since late August when the Myanmar army launched a sweeping crackdown on Rohingya rebels.

After inking a repatriati­on deal with Myanmar in November, Bangladesh said returnees would initially live in temporary shelters in Rakhine state.

That announceme­nt raised fears that the refugees would face a repeat of the situation endured by more than 100,000 Rohingya in central Rakhine, who have been trapped in squalid camps ever since they were displaced by a 2012 outbreak of violence.

“There should be no form of closed camps or camplike settlement­s. NGOs will not operate in such camps if they are created,” aid groups said yesterday, adding that all returns must be voluntary.

The UN has said the army campaign, which saw hundreds of Rohingya villages razed to the ground, likely amounts to ethnic cleansing and has possible “elements of genocide” – charges Myanmar vehemently denies.

While the worst bouts of violence appear to have subsided in recent months, refugees are still crossing the border, UNHCR said on Friday.

The Rohingya face intense discrimina­tion in mainly Buddhist Myanmar.

Myanmar does not recognise the minority as a genuine ethnicity and has systematic­ally stripped the group of citizenshi­p, while curtailing their movement and access to jobs and basic services.

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