Gulf Times

Bangladesh to blame if Rohingya return delayed: Myanmar

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Myanmar’s government yesterday insisted any delays to the repatriati­on of Rohingya refugees would be the fault of Bangladesh, just four days ahead of the controvers­ial planned start date.

After repeated setbacks, the neighbouri­ng countries declared that the first of more than 2,200 Rohingya refugees would be repatriate­d on November 15, even though internatio­nal NGOs and the United Nations have said conditions are not yet in place for a safe return.

More than 720,000 Rohingya Muslims fled Myanmar’s western Rakhine state in a military crackdown in August last year.

Survivors brought with them testimony of widespread murder, rape, torture and arson and are fearful of going back to Rakhine state without guarantees of safety, freedom of movement and citizenshi­p.

Myanmar and Bangladesh signed the deal last November but the UN has repeatedly said that any repatriati­on must be “safe, dignified and voluntary”.

“We are ready,” declared Social Welfare Minister Win Myat Aye to reporters in Yangon yesterday.

Provisions at a transit camp will include clothes and food rations and the refugees will also be provided with money to help them rebuild their homes in one of 42 locations, he added.

But he was unable to confirm who would be in the first group to return, insisting that it was down to Bangladesh to make sure they meet the deadline this week.

“It depends on the other country (Bangladesh) if the repatriati­ons will start on November 15,” he said.

Both government­s have been pushing ahead with this first large-scale repatriati­on effort, pledging to bring back a total of 2,251 Rohingya at the rate of 150 individual­s a day.

This has prompted criticism from a group of 42 aid agencies - including Oxfam, WorldVisio­n and Save the Children - who say that it would be dangerous for them.

UN investigat­ors have called for the country’s top military brass to be prosecuted for genocide at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) over the crackdown.

Myanmar vehemently rejects the court’s jurisdicti­on over the country and insists the military campaign was justified to defend itself against Rohingya terrorists.

The UN fact-finding team also said that civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s government - in a power-sharing agreement with the military - were complicit in the atrocities against the Rohingya through their “acts and omissions”.

She is due to speak to business leaders at a regional Asean forum in Singapore today.

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