MYANMAR FINALIZES ROHINGYA REPATRIATION PREPARATIONS AS DOUBTS MOUNT
Myanmar
was making final preparations to take back the first batch of Rohingya Muslims,
Who had fled conflict in troubled Rakhine state, state media said on Saturday,
despite growing doubts about the plan among refugees and in the United Nations.
Rakhine
state Chief Minister Nyi Pu “insisted on completion of the finishing touches on
buildings, medical clinics and sanitation infrastructures” during a visit to
repatriation camps in the state on Friday, the Global New Light of Myanmar
newspaper said.
It
published a photo of his delegation standing by a long, wooden house that will
be used to house returnees at the camp near the town of Maungtaw. A wire-mesh
fence topped by barbed wire appears in the background of the photo.
Over655,500 Muslim Rohingya fled to Bangladesh after the Myanmar military cracked
down in the northern part of Rakhine in response to militant attacks on
security forces on Aug. 25. The United Nations described the operation as
ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya, which Myanmar denies.
Myanmar
will start receiving Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh at two reception centers
and the temporary camp near Maungtaw starting on Tuesday and continuing over
the next two years, under an agreement the two countries signed this week.
Bangladesh
will provide an advance list of prospective returnees with forms attesting to
their residency in Myanmar, the newspaper said. Some returnees will cross over
by land and others via a river along the border, it said.
Rohingya
refugees at the sprawling Kutupalong camp in Bangladesh are balking at going
back until Myanmar can guarantee their safety, among other demands listed in a
petition drawn up by camp leaders and shown to Reuters.
Even
as Myanmar gets ready to start receiving the Rohingya next week, more of them
are fleeing continued military operations in Rakhine, newly arrived refugees
camp have told Reuters.
More
than 100 Rohingya Muslims from northern Rakhine fled into Bangladesh and scores
more were waiting to cross the Naf river that forms the border, they said.
‘CONCENTRATION
CAMPS’
Rohingya
Muslim insurgents said on Saturday the repatriation plan was “not acceptable”
and “the Burmese terrorist government is deceitfully and crookedly offering
Rohingya refugees to settle down in so-called temporary camps”. Burma is the
former name of Myanmar.
“Repatriated
Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh will never be able to settle down in their
own ancestral lands and villages, rather than spending not only the rest of
their lives but also the lives of their next generations to come in those
concentration camps,” the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) said in a
statement on Twitter.
PRESS STATEMENT [20/01/2018]:— ARSA_The Army (@ARSA_Official) January 19, 2018
- We urge #Aung San Su Kyi's Terrorist government to be more realistic and civilised
- #Rohingya refugees in #Bangladesh must be consulted in all decision-making pic.twitter.com/I0CkZpORZE
Myanmar
has said it would build a transit camp that can house 30,000 returnees before
they are allowed to return to their “place of origin” or “nearest to their
place of origin.”
Government
spokesman Zaw Htay did not respond to requests for comment on the ARSA
statement.
Paul
Vrieze, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) spokesman in Myanmar,
cautioned that the returnees must not be rushed out of Bangladesh prematurely
“without the informed consent of refugees or the basic elements of lasting
solutions in place”.
“Further
measures are also required to ensure safe, voluntary and sustainable
repatriation of refugees to their places of origin and to address the
underlying root causes of the crisis,” he told Reuters.
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