Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rohingya refugees relocated to remote Bangladesh island

- JULHAS ALAM

DHAKA, Bangladesh — Authoritie­s in Bangladesh on Friday sent the first group of more than 1,500 Rohingya refugees to an isolated island despite calls by human-rights groups for a halt to the process.

The 1,642 refugees boarded seven Bangladesh­i naval vessels in the port of Chittagong for the trip to Bhashan Char, according to an official who could not be named in accordance with local practice.

After about a three-hour trip they arrived at the island, which was once regularly submerged by monsoon rains but now has flood protection embankment­s, houses, hospitals and mosques built at a cost of more than $112 million by the Bangladesh navy.

Located 21 miles from the mainland, the island surfaced only 20 years ago and was never inhabited.

Saleh Noman, a Bangladesh­i journalist who traveled with the refugees, said by phone from the island that the refugees were given rice, eggs and chickens for lunch after their body temperatur­es were measured by health workers as a coronaviru­s precaution.

Before they boarded the ships they were also given face masks to protect against covid-19.

The island’s facilities are built to accommodat­e 100,000 people, just a fraction of the million Rohingya Muslims who have fled waves of violent persecutio­n in their native Burma and are currently living in crowded, squalid refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar district.

The United Nations has voiced concern that refugees be allowed to make a “free and informed decision” about whether to relocate to the island in the Bay of Bengal.

The director of infrastruc­ture developmen­t on Bhashan Char, Commodore Abdullah Al Mamun Chowdhury, told reporters on the island that the internatio­nal community has nothing to worry about regarding the safety of the refugees.

He said he expects that the U.N. and others would be convinced about the overall arrangemen­ts after visiting the island. Asked when that would be, he answered that the government is working on it.

On Thursday, 11 passenger buses carrying the refugees left Cox’s Bazar on the way to the island. They camped overnight in school buildings in the southeaste­rn city of Chittagong.

Authoritie­s in Cox’s Bazar did not say how the refugees were selected for relocation.

About 700,000 Rohingya fled to the camps in Cox’s Bazar after August 2017, when the military in Buddhist-majority Burma began a harsh crackdown on the Muslim group after an attack by insurgents. The crackdown included rapes, killings and the torching of thousands of homes, and was termed ethnic cleansing by global rights groups and the U.N.

Foreign media have not been permitted to visit the island.

Contractor­s say its infrastruc­ture is like a modern township, with multifamil­y concrete homes, schools, playground­s and roads. It also has solar-power facilities, a water supply system and cyclone shelters.

Burma is often called Myanmar, a name that military authoritie­s adopted in 1989. Some nations have refused to adopt the name change.

A U.N.-sponsored investigat­ion in 2018 recommende­d the prosecutio­n of Burma’s top military commanders on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity for the violence against the Rohingya.

 ?? (AP) ?? Rohingya refugees are transporte­d on a naval vessel Friday to Bhashan Char, or floating island, in the Bay of Bengal, from Chittagong, Bangladesh.
(AP) Rohingya refugees are transporte­d on a naval vessel Friday to Bhashan Char, or floating island, in the Bay of Bengal, from Chittagong, Bangladesh.

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