Eastern Eye (UK)

Delhi to deport ‘Rohingya illegal foreigners’

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INDIA’S home ministry said last Wednesday (17) that Rohingya refugees in New Delhi would be held at a detention centre and then deported, contradict­ing a minister’s earlier statement promising houses and security to members of the Muslim minority.

Hardeep Singh Puri, federal minister for housing and urban affairs, had earlier last week outlined new provisions for the Rohingya, signalling a potential change in the government’s critical stance towards the refugee group from Myanmar.

Rohingya refugees would be allotted flats in western Delhi’s Bakkarwala area, provided basic amenities and round-theclock police protection, Puri had said on Twitter.

However, hours after Puri’s tweets, the home ministry said that “Rohingya illegal foreigners” would remain at a locality in the city’s south as authoritie­s worked to deport them.

“Illegal foreigners are to be kept in the detention centre till their deportatio­n as per law,” the ministry statement said.

“The government of Delhi has not declared the present location as a detention centre. They have been directed to do

the same immediatel­y.”

Prime minister Narendra Modi’s government has previously tried to repatriate members of the Rohingya, who are a minority community in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have fled from persecutio­n and waves of violence in their homeland over the years, mainly to Bangladesh.

As of early this year, around 1,100 Rohingya lived in India’s capital and another 17,000 elsewhere in the country. They were working mainly as manual labourers, hawkers and rickshaw pullers, according to estimates from Rohingya rights activist Ali Johar.

He said some 2,000 Rohingya had left for Bangladesh this year, amid fears of being deported.

“Most of the Rohingya in Delhi live in rented accommodat­ion, where they feel safe, or in settlement­s,” said Johar, 27, who moved to India a decade ago and lives with his family.

Speaking to Reuters before the home ministry’s statement, Johar underlined fears among the community – which has faced the ire of some Indian right-wing Hindu groups – that the new facilities could be used to corral the Rohingya.

“If it turns out to be a detention camp, that will be a nightmare for us,” he said.

 ?? ?? DISPLACED: Rohingya refugees have been living in temporary shelters in New Delhi
DISPLACED: Rohingya refugees have been living in temporary shelters in New Delhi

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