The Pak Banker

UN, Bangladesh sign deal to aid Rohingya relocated to island

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The United Nations and Bangladesh's government have signed an agreement to work together to help Rohingya refugees on an island in the Bay of Bengal where thousands have been relocated from crammed camps near the Myanmar border.

More than 19,000 Rohingya have already been moved to the Bhasan Char island by the government, and the U.N. said one of the key reasons to sign the agreement was to start serving that population. Bangladesh plans to relocate 100,000 Rohingya to the island in phases from the crowded refugee camps in Cox's Bazar district.

The agreement came as a paradigm shift after the U.N. and humanitari­an groups criticized the relocation, saying the 30-year-old island regularly submerged by monsoon rains was not fit for habitation.

But Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government has spent more than $112 million on developmen­t, adding sea walls, hospitals, schools and mosques, and insists it is no more a vulnerable area. After Saturday's agreement, authoritie­s said another 81,000 refugees would be relocated to the island over next three months.

In a statement, the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees said the agreement was a further expression of the Bangladesh's "generosity and support toward the Rohingya population until they can return safely and sustainabl­y to Myanmar." The agreement allows for close cooperatio­n between the government and the U.N. on services and activities to benefit the island's residents. The U.N. also said it had discussion­s with Rohingya living in Cox's Bazar as well as those already living on Bhasan Char island, prior to signing of the agreement.

"These cover key areas of protection, education, skills-training, livelihood­s and health, which will help support the refugees to lead decent lives on the island and better prepare them for sustainabl­e return to Myanmar in the future," according to the statement. Johannes Van Der Klaauw, representa­tive at the UNHCR, said the organizati­on has seen the island and believes Bangladesh's government has added "significan­t infrastruc­ture" to offset environmen­tal hazards.

The agreement also

allows refugees to move back and forth between the island and the main camps in Cox's Bazar, he said.

Refugees will also have a chance to earn a living through odd jobs that will be accessible once aid organizati­ons set up on the island. Klaauw also noted that movement to Bhasan Char would be on an informed and voluntary basis. But most Rohingya refugees say they don't want to relocate. A woman who had moved to the island with her family earlier this year said many escaped on boats back to the camp because life on the island is hard for the refugees.

"If people stay there for a couple of years, all of them might start having mental issues," she said, adding that medical and other aid facilities were not very well set up on the island. She was unwilling to be named, fearing retributio­n. Amir Hamza, 63, another refugee said he won't relocate to the island.

"I will go to the country where I was born, my father and grandfathe­r were born. I have love for that country, and I agree to go to that country. I don't agree to go to another country, island, or any place, even if I am offered milk and rice on a golden plate. I am ready and happy to go to my country, land, and to my home."

Bangladesh has been sheltering 1.1 million Rohingya from Myanmar, including more than 700,000 who fled a harsh military crackdown on the Muslim ethnic group in August 2017 following an attack by insurgents. Hasina says her administra­tion will not force them to return. The Rohingya are not recognized as citizens in Myanmar, rendering them stateless, and face other forms of state-sanctioned discrimina­tion.

A U.N.-sponsored investigat­ion in 2018 recommende­d the prosecutio­n of Myanmar's top military commanders on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity for the violence against the Rohingya. One woman held a sign that read "Ever seen a president calling his people insects?", referring to Saied's speech on Saturday in which he called Sunday's demonstrat­ors "insects" and "devils."

Demonstrat­or Gharbi Rebha said that she was worried about Saied's divisive rhetoric and said that the president should encourage his people to unite, rather than fight each other. Rebha voted for Saied in the 2019 elections, which saw him win by a landslide and she now feels betrayed.

 ?? ?? BRUSSELS
Protestors hold banners and signs as they participat­e in a climate march in Brussels. Some 80 organizati­ons are joining in a climate march through Brussels to demand change and push politician­s to effective action in Glasgow later this month. -AP
BRUSSELS Protestors hold banners and signs as they participat­e in a climate march in Brussels. Some 80 organizati­ons are joining in a climate march through Brussels to demand change and push politician­s to effective action in Glasgow later this month. -AP

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