Khaleej Times

Rohingya were driven into Bangladesh since last August

- AFP

maungdaw — Rohingya holed up in a border ‘no man’s land’ after fleeing Myanmar will only accept repatriati­on to their home villages, a local leader said on Sunday, rejecting any move to transit camps for fear of long-term confinemen­t.

Some 700,000 Rohingya have been driven into neighbouri­ng Bangladesh since last August by a major army crackdown — purportedl­y intended to “clear” northern Rakhine state of militants from the Muslim minority.

The UN describes it as a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Muslim Rohingya, an allegation staunchly denied by mainly Buddhist Myanmar.

Overwhelme­d by the influx, Bangladesh wants Myanmar to take them back and the neighbours agreed to start repatriati­ng refugees in January. But so far no Rohingya have returned.

Since August several thousand of the Rohingya have been living in tents beyond a barbed-wire fence which roughly demarcates the border zone between the two countries, reliant on NGO food handouts.

Myanmar authoritie­s are pressing hard for their return and have increased troop numbers on their side of the fence, accusing Rohingya militants of infiltrati­ng the camp. But despite the apparent show of force and looming monsoon rains, a camp leader told reporters they would not bow to pressure to return or to move forward into Bangladesh.

“We have no intention to enter Bangladesh. We are not Bengali... we are Myanmar original citizens,” Dil Mohamed, 51, told reporters through barbed wire in an interview in “no man’s land”, during a government-steered trip through the Maungdaw border district.

Dil said the villagers — who number

BiD To ProSeCuTe Suu Kyi rejeCTeD

We have no intention to enter Bangladesh. We are not Bengali... we are Myanmar original citizen

Dil Mohamed, a Rohingya refugee

around 6,000 — would return to Myanmar only if they are guaranteed safety, compensati­on for the homes burned down in the army clearance and permission to resettle in their old villages.

“We don’t want to go to the transit camps. We need to go directly to our homes,” he said, referring to sites set up by Myanmar authoritie­s to process returning refugees.

The internatio­nal Red Cross currently provides supplies to the group, who collect it by crossing a creek and reaching the Bangladesh side. Fears abound that transit camps and resettleme­nt villages being built for returnees will effectivel­y become long-term detention centres.

More than 120,000 Rohingya are already confined to squalid camps further south in Myanmar following earlier bouts of communal violence, with their movements strictly controlled.

Myanmar denies any plan to hold Rohingya. “We don’t have any vision or intention to keep them long,” Ye Htut, the administra­tor of Maungdaw district, told reporters on Saturday as they were chaperoned around northern Rakhine by government minders.

But the repatriati­on process appears to be in disarray, with the internatio­nal community saying continuing insecurity precludes a swift return for the refugees. —

Filipinos have been killed by police in the past 19 months

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