The Scotsman

First Rohingya family return home despite UN safety warning

● Myanmar says refugees have crossed border from Bangladesh

- By MARGARET NEIGHBOUR

Myanmar says it has repatriate­d the first family of Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh, despite the UN warning it is not safe to return.

Some 700,000 Rohingya Muslim refugees fled military-led violence against the minority group last year.

A government statement said on Saturday that five members of a family returned to western Rakhine state from a refugee camp across the border in Bangladesh.

The statement said that authoritie­s determined whether they had lived in the country and provided them with a national verificati­on card - a form of ID that doesn’t mean the citizenshi­p Rohingya have been denied in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where they have faced persecutio­n for decades.

It said that the family was staying temporaril­y with relatives in Maungdaw town, the administra­tive centre close to the border.

Bangladesh has given Myanmar a list of more than 8,000 refugees to begin the repatriati­on, but it has been further delayed by a complicate­d verificati­on process.

The two countries agreed in December to begin repatriati­ng them in January, but they were delayed by concerns among aid workers and Rohingya they would be forced to return and face unsafe conditions in Myanmar.

Hundreds of Rohingya were reportedly killed in the recent violence, and many houses and villages burned to the ground. The United Nations and the US have described the army crackdown as “ethnic cleansing.”

On Friday, the UN refugee agency and Bangladesh finalised a memorandum of understand­ing that describes the repatriati­on process as “safe, voluntary and dignified ... in line with internatio­nal standards.”

UNHCR said it “considers that conditions in Myanmar are not yet conducive for returns to be safe, dignified, and sustainabl­e. The responsibi­lity for creating such conditions remains with the Myanmar authoritie­s, and these must go beyond the preparatio­n of physical infrastruc­ture to facilitate logistical arrangemen­ts.”

Early this week, Myanmar Social Welfare Minister Win Myat Aye met with about 40 Rohingya refugees at the Kutupalong camp in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh for more than an hour, sometimes exchanging heated words.

A Rohingya leader, Abdur Rahim, said at least eight rape victims were among those who met with him. Mr Rahim said the group presented 13 demands for the government to meet for their return to Myanmar.

He said the group became angry when Win Myat Aye demanded the refugees accept national verificati­on cards to be provided by Myanmar in which they state they are migrants from Bangladesh.

Rohingyamu­slimshavel­ong been treated as outsiders in Myanmar, even though their families have lived in the country for generation­s. Nearly all have been denied citizenshi­p since 1982, effectivel­y rendering them stateless. They are denied freedom of movement and other basic rights.

Rohingya who have been repatriate­d in the past have been forced to live in camps in Myanmar.

 ??  ?? 0 A Rohingya woman at a repatriati­on camp in Maungdaw
0 A Rohingya woman at a repatriati­on camp in Maungdaw

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom