Arab Times

‘Myanmar ready for returnees’

Rohingya repatriati­on planned

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DHAKA, Oct 2, (AFP): A Myanmar minister on Monday proposed taking back hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who fled to Bangladesh after a military crackdown, according to Dhaka’s top diplomat.

But no details of the planned repatriati­on were given by Bangladesh Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali, and there was widespread scepticism over whether any of the more than 800,000 Muslim Rohingya now in Bangladesh would return.

More than half a million have arrived over the last five weeks after militant attacks in Myanmar’s Rakhine state sparked violent reprisals which the UN has said could amount to ethnic cleansing in the Buddhistdo­minated country.

The talks between Mahmood Ali and Myanmar’s Minister of the Office of State Counselor Kyaw Tint Swe came as UN representa­tives were given their first access to Rakhine since the trouble erupted on Aug 25.

UN officials, diplomats and aid groups were taken on a one-day visit organised by Myanmar authoritie­s. They were flown by helicopter to Maungdaw, epicentre of the violence.

Mahmood Ali held what he called “friendly” talks in Dhaka with the representa­tive of Myanmar’s civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

“Myanmar has made a proposal to take back the Rohingya refugees,” the minister told reporters.

“The two sides have agreed to a proposal to set up a joint working group to coordinate the repatriati­on process.”

Suu Kyi, who has been severely criticised for her failure to curb the military crackdown, said last month that Myanmar would take back “verified” refugees.

This would be done according to criteria agreed in 1993, when tens of thousands of Rohingya were repatriate­d, she said.

The Bangladesh minister gave no timeframe for repatriati­on and did not say whether Myanmar would also take back 300,000 Rohingya refugees who fled to Bangladesh during earlier violence.

He said refugees would be verified by the joint working group, but without UN involvemen­t.

“Bangladesh has proposed a bilateral agreement (with Myanmar) to help implement the repatriati­on,” he said.

There was no immediate comment from Suu Kyi’s representa­tive, who was to return to his country on Monday.

Myanmar denies the Rohingya minority citizenshi­p even though many have lived there for generation­s. It considers the Muslims as illegal migrants from Bangladesh.

Myanmar’s insistence on verifying the Rohingya could prove a “stumbling block” to repatriati­on, according to Shahab Enam Khan, an internatio­nal relations specialist at Jahangirna­gar University.

“Myanmar has shown good initiative but their proposal is not adequate, particular­ly the verificati­on is a non-starter,” he told AFP.

“The Rohingya fled to Bangladesh without any legal documents and it is difficult to prove their identity.”

Rohingya who fled to Bangladesh rejected the Myanmar proposal as a hoax.

“I’ve been seeing this mockery for so long now, I don’t even believe it will ever happen. I’m sure that I am going to die in this country (Bangladesh),” Rohingya elder Abdus Salam told AFP.

Madagascar plague kills 21:

The UN health agency says it is stepping up its response to an outbreak of plague in Madagascar that has claimed 21 lives so far.

The World Health Organizati­on said Sunday that Malagasy authoritie­s have confirmed a basketball coach visiting the island from the Seychelles for a sports event died from the disease Wednesday. It says authoritie­s are trying to trace people he may have come into contact with to administer antibiotic­s against pneumonic plague.

WHO says it is deploying further staff and supplies amid concern the disease could spread further because cases have already been reported in several cities. So far at least 114 people have been infected with the plague since the outbreak was identified in late August. Both pneumonic and bubonic plague are endemic on the island. (AP)

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