Eastern Eye (UK)

Jittery refugees seek UN’s help

ROHINGYA VOICE SECURITY CONCERNS AFTER MURDERS

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ROHINGYA refugees in Bangladesh on Tuesday (16) implored the United Nations rights chief for protection after recent murders that have again left members of the stateless minority fearful for their safety.

Michelle Bachelet spent the day meeting residents of the sprawling and squalid relief settlement­s housing nearly a million ethnic Rohingya who fled persecutio­n in neighbouri­ng Myanmar.

Security in the camps came back into focus this month when two refugee community leaders were shot dead, allegedly by an insurgent group active in the camps. At least eight suspected Rohingya assailants shot Syed Hossain, 40, and Abu Taleb, 35, at around midnight, police spokesman Kamran Hossain said last week.

“She wanted to know about murders in the camps. We discussed it and also we discussed camp security,” religious leader Maulvi Zafar said by phone after meeting the envoy.

“We talked about strengthen­ing camp security. We demanded security,” he added.

Most inhabitant­s of the camps fled Myanmar in 2017 after an army offensive against the mostly Muslim minority.

The crackdown is now the subject of a case at the UN’s highest court, with Myanmar’s authoritie­s accused of genocide.

Security in the camps has been a constant issue, with scores of murders, kidnapping­s and police dragnets targeting drug traffickin­g networks.

Last September saw the murder of top Rohingya leader Mohib Ullah, who had shot to prominence for organising a protest of about 100,000 refugees to mark two years since their exodus.

He also met then US president Donald Trump in the White House that year and addressed a UN meeting in Geneva.

His murder was quickly followed by the killings of six Rohingya students and teachers at an Islamic religious school.

Camp residents blamed both attacks – and the two killings earlier this month – on the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, an insurgent group that has been accused of traffickin­g narcotics and murdering political opponents.

Bangladesh refugee commission­er Shah Rezwan Hayat said Bachelet had asked about reports of violence in the camps, but added that “all sorts of measures have been taken by the government” to improve security.

He said she also asked about education and livelihood opportunit­ies for the Rohingya people, and he replied that the government would gradually scale up schooling for all refugee children in the camps.

Bachelet is on a four-day visit to Bangladesh before her term as UN high commission­er for human rights ends later this month.

She was due to address the media in the capital Dhaka on Wednesday (17).

 ?? © AFP/Getty Images ?? SAFETY FOCUS: Michelle Bachelet (centre) visits a Rohingya refugee camp in Ukhia on Tuesday (16)
© AFP/Getty Images SAFETY FOCUS: Michelle Bachelet (centre) visits a Rohingya refugee camp in Ukhia on Tuesday (16)

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