ROHINGY REPATRIATION : BANGLADESH SAYS START OF ROHINGYA REPATRIATION TO MYANMAR DELAYED
Rohingya refugees |
Bangladesh has delayed the repatriation of Rohingya Muslim refugees
to Myanmar, set to start on Tuesday, because the process of compiling and
verifying the list of people to be sent back is incomplete, a senior Bangladesh
official said.
The decision comes
as tensions have risen in camps holding hundreds of thousands of refugees, some
of whom are opposing their transfer back to Myanmar because of what they say is
a lack of guarantees of their security.
Myanmar and
Bangladesh agreed earlier this month to complete the voluntary repatriation of
the refugees within two years, starting on Tuesday. Myanmar says it has set up
two reception centers and a temporary camp near the border to receive the first
arrivals.
But Abul Kalam,
Bangladesh’s refugee relief and rehabilitation commissioner, said on Monday the
return would have to be delayed.
“There are many
things remaining,” he told Reuters by phone. “The list of people to be sent
back is yet to be prepared, their verification and setting up of transit camps
is remaining.”
A Bangladesh Border
Guard official said it could be months before the transfers begin.
The International
Organisation for Migration says the number of Rohingya who fled to Bangladesh
since late August now stands at 688,000. The exodus began when the Myanmar
military launched a crackdown following insurgent raids on security forces on
Aug. 25.
The head of the
UNHCR, the United Nations’ refugee agency, said more time was needed to prepare
the return of the Rohingya refugees to Rakhine, and urged the two governments
to involve it in their efforts to resolve the refugee crisis.
“In order for the
repatriation to be right, sustainable, actually viable, you need to really to
address a number of issues that for the time being we have heard nothing about,
including the citizenship issue, the rights of the Rohingya in Rakhine state,
meaning freedom of movement, access to services, to livelihoods,” Filippo
Grandi told Reuters.
The UNHCR, which is
helping to administer the refugee camps, is not involved in the repatriation
process.
Grandi said it was
especially important to set up a monitoring mechanism in northern Rakhine for
the returning people.
The Rohingya have
long been denied citizenship by Myanmar, where many in the Buddhist majority
regard them as interlopers from Bangladesh.
GUARANTEES
Myanmar said on
Monday it was ready to take back the returning Rohingya.
“We are ready to
accept them once they come back. On our part, the preparation is ready,” Ko Ko
Naing, director general of Myanmar’s Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and
Resettlement, told Reuters by phone.
He declined to
comment on whether Bangladesh had informed Myanmar about the delay.
At the Palong Khali
refugee camp, near the Naf river that marks the border between the two
countries, a group of Rohingya leaders gathered early on Monday morning with a
loudspeaker and a banner listing a set of demands for their return to Myanmar.
These include
security guarantees, the granting of citizenship and the group’s recognition as
one of Myanmar’s official ethnic minorities. The Rohingya are also asking that
homes, mosques and schools that were burned down or damaged in the military
operation be rebuilt.
Bangladesh army
troops arrived at the camp and dispersed a crowd of at least 300 people who had
gathered to listen to the leaders, according to witnesses who said they saw the
army take away one of the Rohingya leaders.
Bangladesh army
spokesman Rashedul Hasan said he had not received any information about
protests in refugee camps on Monday.
A Bangladesh Border
Guard official said there would be no forced repatriation of the refugees to
Myanmar and denied they would lose their food ration cards if they remained in
the camps.
“This is out of the
question. It will be voluntary. But this is not going to be an easy task to
send them back as they are reluctant,” the official in the border district of
Cox’s Bazaar told .
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 somewhere “nearest to their
place of origin”.
The country’s state
media reported over the weekend that authorities in Rakhine were making final
preparations to take back the first batch of refugees.
Source : PALONG KHALI, Bangladesh (Reuters)
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