Kuwait Times

Rohingya sceptical of Myanmar refugee return offer

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Rohingya refugees said Wednesday they doubted Myanmar was offering a genuine return to their homeland, as a spokesman for the country’s military junta said it would begin welcoming back members of the persecuted minority as soon as next month. A delegation of 17 officials from Myanmar’s junta was in Bangladesh this week to interview potential candidates for return, more than five years after a brutal military crackdown drove immense numbers of Rohingya out of their homes.

The visit, brokered by China and partly facilitate­d by the United Nations, jumpstarte­d a repatriati­on agreement between the two countries that has languished for years, partly over fears that the refugees would not be safe on their return. But Rohingya interviewe­d by the delegation told AFP that none of their queries about security or recognitio­n of their right to citizenshi­p in Myanmar had been answered.

“They used to treat us badly there. I asked whether we would be able to live a normal life there, but then they stopped me,” Shamsun Nahar, a 40-year-old Rohingya woman, told AFP. “They did not want any more questions,” she added. “I don’t think they will take us to Myanmar. If they do, they won’t give us any rights.” The Myanmar delegation left Wednesday after a week in the sprawling refugee camps home to around a million Rohingya. Junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun told AFP after their departure that Myanmar would likely begin the repatriati­on process by mid-April and would welcome around 1,000 refugees at first. Myanmar’s representa­tives were officially there to assess refugees for potential return, based partly on whether they could prove their residence in the country before the 2017 crackdown. But another refugee interviewe­d by the delegation said documentat­ion proving his residency was treated with scepticism. “I provided all the documents, they said ‘hmm’,” Soyod Hossain, 50, told AFP. “I don’t think they believe that our documents were genuine.”

‘Token’ return

The Rohingya are widely viewed in Myanmar as interloper­s from Bangladesh, despite roots in the country stretching back centuries, and are stateless after Myanmar ceased recognisin­g their citizenshi­p in 2015. unta chief Min Aung Hlaing, who has dismissed the Rohingya identity as “imaginary”, was head of the armed forces during the 2017 crackdown. That year’s violence is now subject to a genocide investigat­ion, with the Internatio­nal Court of Justice probing allegation­s of rape, murder and arson against entire Rohingya villages by Myanmar’s security forces.

The Arakan Rohingya National Alliance, a prominent Rohingya diaspora group, accused Myanmar last week of planning to orchestrat­e a “token” return of refugees to avoid the court’s censure. The UN refugee agency said once again Sunday that conditions in Myanmar remained unsuitable for the “sustainabl­e return” of Rohingya refugees. But civil society groups have criticised the agency for facilitati­ng the transport of Myanmar officials into Bangladesh last week as part of the return scheme. A repatriati­on plan was first agreed upon soon after the 2017 crackdown but failed to make any significan­t headway.

 ?? ?? UKHIA: A Rohingya refugee child walks back to his makeshift shelter after collecting water at Hakimpara refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district. – AFP
UKHIA: A Rohingya refugee child walks back to his makeshift shelter after collecting water at Hakimpara refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district. – AFP

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