The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India detains scores of Rohingya ahead of expected deportatio­n to Myanmar

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SRINAGAR, India: Scores of Rohingya who fled persecutio­n in Myanmar are being held in a detention centre in the Indian territory of Jammu and Kashmir, an official said Sunday, after being rounded up ahead of their expected deportatio­n to the protest-wracked nation.

At least 168 people from the Muslim minority from Buddhistdo­minated Myanmar have been picked up by authoritie­s in the northern territory since Saturday, Jammu’s Inspector General of Police, Mukesh Singh, said.

“After nationalit­y verificati­on of these illegal immigrants, details will be sent to the Ministry of External Affairs in Delhi to be taken up with Myanmar for their deportatio­n,” Singh told AFP.

Some 5,000 Rohingya are believed to live in Jammu and Kashmir, Singh said.

Most live in slums in Hindumajor­ity Jammu, where they say they have faced threats to their lives.

“It’s better to shoot us all dead here than send us to Burma (Myanmar) where we will be rained with bullets anyway,” a Rohingya, who gave his name as Rafique, told AFP in a phone call on Sunday.

“We haven’t slept since police started rounding us up and separating our children from their families,” Rafique, who lives in Jammu’s Bathindi slum area, added.

The United Nations says there are 16,000 registered Rohingya in India, but many more are believed to be undocument­ed.

The Hindu-nationalis­t government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has for years asked state and territory government­s to identify and deport the approximat­ely 40,000 Rohingya it says are living in India.

New Delhi has described the Rohingya as a security threat and accused them of having links with the Islamic State and other Muslim extremist groups – charges denied by the community’s leaders.

Officials did not say why there was a push now to deport the stateless group, who have long suffered persecutio­n in their homeland where they are denied freedom of movement and citizenshi­p.

Almost a million Rohingya live in sprawling camps in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh, with many having fled Myanmar after a bloody military crackdown in 2017.

Human Rights Watch had previously urged India, the world’s largest democracy, to follow the internatio­nal principle of non-refoulemen­t, which prohibits sending refugees back to places where their lives are in danger.

Myanmar is also now in the grip of mass protests after a Feb 1 coup ousted civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

On Saturday, officials said scores of Myanmar nationals had gathered at the border with India waiting to join 48 others – including eight police officers – who had entered the northeaste­rn state of Mizoram in a bid to escape the turmoil in their homeland.

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