Eastern Eye (UK)

Dhaka seals deal to shift Rohingya

UN TO HELP RELOCATE REFUGEES TO REMOTE BAY OF BENGAL ISLAND

- (AFP)

BANGLADESH wants to send more than 80,000 Rohingya refugees to a remote island in the Bay of Bengal after sealing an agreement for the United Nations to provide help, officials said last Friday (8).

Some 19,000 of the Muslim refugees from Myanmar have already relocated from crowded camps on the mainland to Bhashan Char island, despite doubts raised by aid groups, officials said.

Bangladesh refugee commission­er Shah Rezwan Hayat said tens of thousands more would go once the monsoon storms that batter the Bay of Bengal each year end in November.

“We are aiming to relocate some 81,000 (Rohingya) to Bhashan Char by the end of February to complete the 100,000 quota,” he said.

The government has spent about $350 million building shelters on the 53-square-kilometre island which was formed by tidal silt deposits about 20 years ago. On top of the inhospitab­le weather, the island is 60 km from the Bangladesh mainland and some Rohingya groups say people were forced to go there. About 850,000 Rohingya are packed into camps along the Bangladesh-Myanmar border. Most fled a Myanmar military clampdown in 2017 that the UN says could be genocide.

Bangladesh has been praised for taking in the refugees who poured across the border, but has had little success finding them permanent homes.

While a Bangladesh security intelligen­ce agency is responsibl­e for relocating the refugees, the government denies that any coercion has been used. Still, several hundred Rohingya have fled Bhashan Char only to be detained on other islands or in coastal villages. Dozens died after a fishing boat packed with Rohingya trying to flee the island sank in August.

The UN had expressed doubts about the relocation­s. But Bangladesh and UN officials said a deal has been agreed to give the UN a role in providing humanitari­an assistance and monitoring conditions on the island. “We can confirm that the UN will sign a memorandum of understand­ing with the government to protect Rohingya refugees in Bhashan Char on Saturday (9),” a spokespers­on for UNHCR, the UN’s refugee agency, told AFP.

Refugee commission­er Hayat said the UN would play a bigger role on the island than they do now in the mainland refugee camps, where they already have extensive operations. “Bhashan Char residents will receive similar treatment, humanitari­an response-wise, to what is now provided to people in the Cox’s Bazar camps,” he said.

He added there would also be greater opportunit­ies for Rohingya to work on the island than there are now in the rigidly policed camps.

 ?? ?? STATELESS: Some 19,000 Muslim refugees from Myanmar have relocated from crowded camps on the mainland to Bhashan Char island last December
STATELESS: Some 19,000 Muslim refugees from Myanmar have relocated from crowded camps on the mainland to Bhashan Char island last December

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