Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Ethnic groups undercount­ed’

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ETHNIC minorities have been undercount­ed in Bangladesh’s latest census, Indigenous activists said last Thursday (11), with implicatio­ns for some of the poorest people in the country.

Bangladesh’s population is 99 per cent Bengalis, with a scattering of ethnic and indigenous groups – most of them Buddhists and Christians – in the Muslim-majority country’s northern hill districts.

Census results in July said those minorities amounted to 1.65 million people, one per cent of the national total of 165 million. But Sanjeeb Drong, general secretary of the Bangladesh Indigenous Peoples’ Forum, said his organisati­on estimated there were “around three million” – almost twice as many.

Many ethnic minorities in remote areas had gone uncounted by census enumerator­s, he said. “If you don’t count the indigenous people, it is easy to ignore their demand for self determinat­ion, land rights, developmen­t budget and also human rights,” he said.

The census found that Indigenous people were now a minority in two of the three districts of the Chittagong Hill Tracts, where ethnic groups waged a decades-long insurgency for self-rule. The 1.65 million figure was up slightly from the previous total in 2011, but included an additional 23 ethnic groups.

The population of the 27 groups included in the last census had actually declined over the period, said Philip Gain, of the Society for Environmen­t and Human Developmen­t. “There is a clear carelessne­ss, neglect and lack of skills on the part of the enumerator­s,” he said.

Dipankar Roy, a senior official of the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics, which conducted the census, defended the survey and ruled out any possibilit­y of deliberate undercount­ing.

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