Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Stateless people in trouble

What can be done for them

- Shaikh abDul raSheeD The writer is a freelance columnist

Monday March 22 was another tragic day for the Rohingyas. The tragic occurrence that day was an immense fire that swept through the Balukhali refugee camp at Cox’s Bazar in southern Bangladesh. The worst blaze damaged thousands of shanties and killed many refugees. another huge inferno tore through the camp on January 14, demolishin­g around 550 shack shelters and forcing at least 3500 refugees, including children and women, to flee their huts. The most recent blaze is also the latest episode in the tragedies for the Rohingyas.

The Rohingya Muslims are indigenous to Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine, which they have been inhabiting for centuries. according to estimates, the total population of the community in Rakhine was 1.1 million in 2017. What havoc life has wrecked with the Rohingya is that they have yet not been acknowledg­ed as one of its official ethnic groups by Myanmar. The people have never been given nationalit­y by the country under its 1982 citizenshi­p law. although under article 15 of the Universal declaratio­n of Human rights everyone has the right to nationalit­y, Myanmar, violating the article, has systematic­ally rendered the Rohingyas a stateless people.

For the last five decades, the Rohingyas in Rakhine were dreadfully attacked in 1978, 1992, 2016 and lastly 2017. of the four onslaughts, the 2017 military crackdown on the minority group was the most atrocious and damaging. In just five days, about 700 buildings were set ablaze; at least 400 people were cruelly killed and hundreds of women and girls were mercilessl­y raped. We can say that, currently, the Rohingyas are the most persecuted people in the world.

The Cox’s Bazar refugee camp that hosts more than a million Rohingya refugees is said to be the largest camp in the world. of the overall refugees at the camp, around 750,000 of them had fled Myanmar to Bangladesh in the aftermath of the damaging assault of 2017. The world’s largest camp consists of shacks made from timber and other inflammabl­e material. The refugees have been living painful and grieved lives in the shack houses with no provision of even basic things like nutritious food, schooling, healthcare or sanitation. However, the 1954 and the 1961 Un Convention­s on the Status of Stateless Persons and the Reduction of Statelessn­ess emphatical­ly direct member countries that the stateless people should be treated in the same way as citizens/nationals of any country. It concludes that the stateless are to be provided with all the basic rights to housing, justice, schooling and healthcare by a host country.

according to estimates of the United nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UnHCR), there are around 79.5 million displaced people across the world and about 45.7 million of them are displaced within their own country. of the overall displaced people, more than two thirds of the total has come from Somalia, afghanista­n, South Sudan, Syria and Myanmar. The main reasons for the displaceme­nt are conflicts and persecutio­ns. There are at least 4.2 million stateless people who have not been given nationalit­y and access to schooling, healthcare and employment. amongst these stateless people, more than 1 million are the Rohingyas.

The shocking fact is that currently the rights of refugees and displaced people are being threatened as the world is facing a global solidarity crisis. The internatio­nal community, especially affluent nations, are unwilling to shoulder the responsibi­lity for supporting and protecting refugees. Many European states are deporting people seeking asylum back to their country of origin to undergo oppression, rapes and violence. It is developing countries who are acting fairly in accordance with their economic standings to resolve the problems of the displaced. They host around 85 percent of the global refugees. amnesty Internatio­nal claims it has been making utmost efforts to convince the developed countries to agree to a global and fairer system for protecting refugees.

at present, what the world urgently needs is to formulate a new global plan for original and unhypocrit­ical cooperatio­n and fair sharing of responsibi­lities. Increased global funding for the protection of refugees and provision of basic needs to them is urgently and severely required. To this end, the developed nations have to make contributi­ons on the fair share basis and have to resettle a huge number of refugees.

Since its foundation in 1984, the Islamic Relief, the world’s largest relief and developmen­t organizati­on, in partnershi­p with 16 organizati­ons has been working in conflict-affected regions across the world to support refugees, displaced people and the nations that host them. This organizati­on, in coordinati­on with WHo, UnHCR, UnICEF and other internatio­nal donor agencies, has to play the productive and humanitari­an role for the Rohingya refugees. Until and unless the problem of their return to their native place is settled, they need permanent housing along with the provision

What role Pakistan should play for the Rohingya refugees is to make political, social and economic efforts for the settlement of their plight and challenges they have been experienci­ng, and to raise a voice time and again for their rights on the platforms of the UN and the OIC and other powerful internatio­nal organizati­ons

of all basic needs.

What role Pakistan should play for the Rohingya refugees is to make political, social and economic efforts for the settlement of their plight and challenges they have been experienci­ng, and to raise a voice time and again for their rights on the platforms of the Un and the oIC and other powerful internatio­nal organizati­ons.

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