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‘ China, India must pressure Myanmar over refugees’

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CHINA AND India must exercise their economic and military clout over Myanmar to convince the Aung San Suu Kyi administra­tion to expedite the repatriati­on of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees living in the camps of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh Deputy High Commission­er to India Toufique Hasan has told Sputnik.

Stating that India is helping Myanmar with an array of connectivi­ty projects and China, on the other hand, has been one of the biggest investors there, Bangladesh’s second- most senior diplomat to India Toufique Hasan said: “Our government wants both to talk to Myanmar on the issue”.

During a visit to Myanmar earlier this week, Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and Army Chief General MM Naravane, “conveyed India’s support for ensuring the safe, sustainabl­e, and speedy return of displaced persons to Rakhine State”.

“Despite various assurances, the repatriati­on of Rohingya refugees doesn’t seem to be a priority for either India or Myanmar”, Hasan stated.

The Bangladesh­i diplomat expressed concern that Nay Pyi Taw has not been honouring a Memorandum of Understand­ing signed with Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, in January 2018, stipulatin­g the Asian nation take back 1 500 Rohingya refugees every week.

Hasan claimed that Rohingya refugees continue to flee from the state of Rakhine, despite Bangladesh­i Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque warning the UN Security Council last year that Dhaka won’t accept any more refugees.

“We will continue to welcome them. Their return to Myanmar is also voluntary. We can’t pressure them into returning.

“No Rohingya refugee from Bangladesh wants to return voluntaril­y”, he said.

The UN Office for the Co- ordination of Humanitari­an Affairs documents that 909 000 Rohingya refugees live in 34 “congested” camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazaar, which is also the site of the world’s largest refugee camp.

Just more than 860 000 of these refugees are registered with the UN Refugee Agency as per its website.

In 2018, Bangladesh­i Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina claimed at the UN General Assembly that nearly 1.1 million Rohingya refugees lived in her country.

India is believed to be hosting nearly 40 000 Rohingya refugees, according to Human Rights Watch.

More than 18 000 of them have been recognised by the UN Refugee Agency. Globally, there are over 200 000 Rohingya people recognised as Internatio­nally Displaced Persons.

In India, a federal order in 2017 called upon all states to identify Rohingya refugees and prepare for their deportatio­n back to their native country.

The government order was later challenged by two Rohingya refugees in the country’s top court.

Meanwhile, Rohingya refugees living in the security camps of India’s Jammu along the border with Pakistan could become a “ticking time- bomb” for the country, security analyst Brigadier Anil Gupta, an Indian Army veteran, opines.

“It is a very sensitive area for India. The vulnerable Rohingya population in Jammu’s camps could be easily exploited by Pakistan- based terror groups to create national security problems for us,” Gupta said.

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