Manila Bulletin

No ‘miracle’ solution at Asian migrant crisis meeting

- By MALCOLM J. FOSTER and JOCELYN GECKER

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Thailand hosted a meeting of 17 countries Friday to address an alarming rise in the number of boat people in Southeast Asian waters.

The talks were delicate because Myanmar – the country thousands of ethnic Rohingya Muslims have fled amid state-sanctioned discrimina­tion and violence – bristles at any suggestion that it’s largely to blame for the crisis. Delegates faced a tricky balancing act of coming up with steps to tackle a complex issue while making sure Myanmar didn’t boycott the talks.

Here’s a look at what the meeting achieved, failed to achieve, and what the likely next steps are. WHAT DID THEY ACCOMPLISH? Countries in the region talked. It was the first time in years, if ever, that they have openly discussed the Rohingya crisis – a highly sensitive topic for Myanmar, which has blocked the topic from regional discussion on numerous occasions. “The first result is that it took place at all, with a very comprehens­ive representa­tion of all the countries – including Myanmar,’’ said Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Migration Director-General William Lacy Swing.

Donors pledged money. The United States announced $3 million in funds in response to an appeal by the IOM for $26 million. The money will help pay for temporary shelter, food and other urgent needs for thousands of migrants. Australia also pledged $4.6 million for humanitari­an assistance in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, where an estimated 1 million Rohingya live in dire conditions.

The US can fly. After a week of delays, Thailand agreed to allow the US military to operate flights out of Thailand to search for migrants believed to be still stuck on boats, after more than 3,000 came ashore this month in Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand. It is unclear why Thailand waited so long to accept the offer. So far, US Navy flights have been operating out of Subang, Malaysia, but could not fly over Thai airspace. WHAT THEY DIDN’T DO: Solve the crisis. “With the situation being what it is, if you expect one meeting to resolve it, you’re expecting a miracle,’’ Top Thai Foreign Ministry official Norachit Sinhaseni said at a closing news briefing.

Enforce a binding agreement. The 17 countries came up with 17 “proposals and recommenda­tions’’ including ambitious steps to improve life in the places people are fleeing. They included “promoting full respect for human rights and adequate access of people to basic rights and services, such as housing, education, and health care.’’ Did Myanmar agree to this overhaul? Norachit’s reply: “That is the aspiration.’’

Discuss the big issues. The Rohingya Muslims risk their lives to flee Buddhist-majority Myanmar because they are persecuted at home. They are denied basic rights including citizenshi­p, are targeted by extremist Buddhist mobs, and are victims of state-sanctioned discrimina­tion. These issues were not discussed, Norachit said. Asked if the fundamenta­l question of citizenshi­p for Rohingya came up, he had a one-word answer: “No.’’

State the R-Word. The term “Rohingya’’ doesn’t appear in their joint statement and, according to Norachit, was barely uttered during the meeting. This was in deference to Myanmar’s distaste for the word. Myanmar had threatened to boycott the talks if the word appeared on the formal invitation. It does not recognize Rohingya as an ethnic group, insisting on calling them “Bengalis,’’ arguing they are really Bangladesh­is. Bangladesh also does not recognize them as citizens.

WHAT’S NEXT: More talks. The meeting was hailed as a good first step, and the countries agreed to hold more talks. Members of the 10-nation Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations agreed to bring the issue to the group’s ministeria­l meeting on transnatio­nal crime. But no date was set for the next round.

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