Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Burma getting ready for Rohingya return

Critics fear persecutio­n will continue

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RANGOON, Burma — The repatriati­on of ethnic Rohingya Muslims from Bangladesh, to which more than 700,000 fled since last year to escape deadly violence carried out by Burma’s security forces, will begin this week, top Burma officials said Sunday.

Burma’s Minister of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettleme­nt Win Myat Aye announced at a news conference that Bangladesh had informed Burma authoritie­s that repatriati­on, agreed upon in principle months ago, would begin on Thursday. A Burma government statement said an initial group of 2,251 would be sent back starting in mid-November at a rate of 150 per day.

Noting that the actual date depended upon Bangladesh taking action, Win Myat Aye said, “Whether it will happen on the day or not, we have to be ready on our side and we try our best to do that.”

Abul Kalam, Bangladesh’s repatriati­on commission­er, said he was unaware that a date had been set. “I have got no decision from our foreign ministry or any other higher authoritie­s,” he said.

The Rohingya exodus began after Burma security forces launched a brutal crackdown following coordinate­d insurgent attacks in August 2017. The scale, organizati­on and ferocity of the operation led to accusation­s from the internatio­nal community, including the United Nations, of ethnic cleansing and genocide. Burma’s government has denied this.

Human rights advocates say conditions are not yet safe for the return of the Rohingya refugees, who have generally been denied citizenshi­p and civil rights in Buddhist-majority Burma, where prejudice against them runs high.

The U.N.’s independen­t investigat­or on human rights in Burma, Yanghee Lee, last week urged a halt to “rushed plans” for the repatriati­on, saying a lack of guarantees that the refugees wouldn’t face new persecutio­n if they returned home was concerning.

According to Sunday’s Burma government statement, the returning Rohingya would stay at repatriati­on camps for two days and receive food and clothing before moving on to transit camps. It said China, India and Japan were “providing necessary assistance” for the repatriati­on process, but did not give details.

It isn’t clear how long the returnees would have to stay in the transit camps or where they would go afterward, as many Rohingya villages have been erased by bulldozers, with the land given to local Rakhine Buddhists.

Officials said Sunday that returnees can get an ID document called a National Verificati­on Card that will allow them to travel anywhere in the Maungdaw area of Rakhine State. They can then begin to apply for citizenshi­p.

But there is widespread skepticism that any returning refugees will ever be granted citizenshi­p.

The overwhelmi­ng majority of people in Burma do not accept that the Rohingya are a native ethnic group, instead seeing them as illegal migrants from Bangladesh and calling them “Bengalis.”

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