Khaleej Times

Rohingya apprehensi­ve of return to Myanmar

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hyderabad — Rohingya refugees living here have appealed to the Indian government to mount pressure on Myanmar to create conditions conducive for their safe return.

Worried over reports that India may deport them, the refugees said they would return on their own once assured safety. They also want Myanmar to grant them citizenshi­p and return their lands.

The deportatio­n of seven Rohingya Muslims earlier this month has left refugees across Indian cities worried.

The seven Rohingya, who were held in a Assam jail since 2012 for illegally entering India, were handed over to the Myanmar government after the Supreme Court turned down a plea to stop the government from deporting them.

The deportatio­n prompted UN High Commission­er for Refugees (Unhcr) to remind New Delhi that the internatio­nal laws required nations to refrain from sending refugees

back to countries where they could still face danger.

While thanking the Indian government for allowing them to live all these years, the refugees appealed to the government not to turn them back as they still face danger to their lives in Myanmar.

“Don’t send us back. Instead, bomb us here. At least we will have graves here. We don’t even get a burial there,” said Sultan Mahmood, one of the refugees, said.

He recalls how they fled to escape

We have seen them butchering many people and setting our houses on fire. That memory still haunts us. We shudder to even think of going back there.

Sultan Mahmood,

one of the refugees

persecutio­n in Myanmar’s Rakhine state and landed up here.

“We have seen them butchering many people and setting our houses on fire. That memory still haunts us. We shudder to even think of going back there,” Sultan, who came to India with his wife and two children including 19-year-old handicappe­d, who is completely bed-ridden.

“Peace has not been restored there. How can we go back?” asks another refugee, Haroon Mohammed Idris, who along with his wife and four children arrived in India in 2012.

Haroon, who lost 20 members of his family including parents, siblings in the crackdown by Myanmar’s armed forces, said if sent back they would also meet the same fate. Sitting in the dirty surroundin­gs in refugee a habitation of small huts in Balapur, 80-year-old Ameer Hussain is worried over the future of his sixmember family. —

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