The Star Malaysia

Rohingya told to leave border zone

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TOMBRU ( Bangladesh): Myanmar security forces have resumed loudspeake­r broadcasts near its border with Bangladesh ordering Rohingya Muslims to immediatel­y leave a strip of no-man’s land between the two countries.

Around 6,000 refugees from the persecuted minority have been camping on the narrow stretch of land since fleeing a brutal military crackdown in Myanmar’s west last August.

The majority of the nearly 700,000 Rohingya who escaped the violence settled in huge camps in Bangladesh but a smaller number insisted on staying put in the buffer zone between the borders.

Myanmar had agreed in February to stop using loudspeake­rs to order the stranded Muslims to leave the area immediatel­y and cross into Bangladesh.

The army also withdrew some of its heavy forces from the edge of no-man’s land, where refugees camped on the other side of a barbed wire fence had complained of intimidati­on.

But the loudspeake­r messages resumed this weekend without warning, Rohingya community leaders said, exacerbati­ng tension along the restive border zone.

“They played it several times on Saturday, and have been repeating it this morning. It’s very disturbing and creates panic,” said Mohammad Arif, one of the leaders camped in no-man’s land.

The messages – broadcast in Burmese and Rohingya – warned the refugees to “leave the area under Myanmar’s jurisdicti­on or face prosecutio­n”.

“We’re citizens of Myanmar. It’s our fatherland. We have every right to remain here. Why should we go elsewhere?” said another community leader, Dil Mohammad.

The broadcasts also refer to the refugees as “Bengalis”, the term used by many in Buddhist-majority Myanmar to refer to the Rohingya, whom they consider interloper­s from Bangladesh.

Lt-Col Manzurul Hasan Khan, a local Border Guard Bangladesh commander, said the situation was being closely monitored.

“We have noticed that they tied loudhailer­s

to the trees along their border fences near the camp,” Khan said.

The refugee crisis has strained ties between Bangladesh and Myanmar.

The neighbours had agreed in November to begin repatriati­ng Rohingya refugees to Myanmar but the process has stalled, with both sides blaming each other for the delays.

Those living in no-man’s land – and many in the Bangladesh­i refugee camps – refuse to return to Myanmar until their safety and citizenshi­p is assured and compensati­on granted for past injustices.

 ?? — AP ?? file photo showing Bangladesh­i border guards gesturing to Rohingya who are stuck in the ‘no man’s land’ in Tombru.
— AP file photo showing Bangladesh­i border guards gesturing to Rohingya who are stuck in the ‘no man’s land’ in Tombru.

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