BANGLADESH, MYANMAR OFFICIALS VISIT ROHINGYA TRAPPED AT BORDER
Rohingya File photo |
Myanmar and
Bangladeshi representatives held talks about 5,300 Rohingya Muslims trapped on
a strip of unclaimed land between their two countries and visited the area on
Tuesday, officials and Rohingya refugees told .
Nearly 700,000Rohingya have fled Myanmar’s Rakhine State and crossed into Bangladesh since
August, when attacks on security posts by insurgents triggered a military
crackdown that the United Nations has said amounts to ethnic cleansing, with
reports of arson attacks, murder and rape.
A leader of Rohingya
people living in the buffer zone, Dil Mohammed, told Reuters that during the
visit the Rohingya reiterated their demands, including for U.N. peacekeeping
forces to be stationed in Rakhine, and for aid agencies and media to have free
access to the state.
Bangladeshis urged
the Rohingya to return to Myanmar.
“We have asked them
(Myanmar authorities) to ensure their safety and security and only after that
Bangladesh is ready to coordinate them,” said Bangladeshi Relief and Refugee
Repatriation Commissioner Mohammad Abul Kalam.
“We visited the
Rohingya with the Myanmar delegation and requested them to go back to their
homes. They said ... they are willing to return to their land, but for that
they need to ensure safety and security,” said Kalam.
Deputy Director Kyaw
Swar Tun from Rakhine State’s administration confirmed that the meeting had
taken place but did not elaborate.
The U.N. refugee
agency UNHCR, which was not involved in the talks, has expressed concern the
Rohingya may be forced back to Myanmar without due consideration for their
safety.
A UNHCR spokesman,
Andrej Mahecic, said there was no clarity as to what the people living in the
unclaimed land wanted to do.
“This is no safe
place to be - so we would like to see clarity about the wishes of the group.
Some clearly have indicated that they would want to seek safety in Bangladesh,”
said Mahecic.
Buddhist-majority
Myanmar denies accusations of human rights abuses and says its military has
fought a legitimate campaign against “terrorists” it has blamed for the attacks
on the security forces.
The majority of
Rohingya who fled are in camps in the Cox’s Bazar district of southern
Bangladesh, but several thousand in the border buffer zone are stuck.
Bangladesh security
forces have been instructed not to let those Rohingya cross the border, and
many of them have said they would rather stay there to avoid becoming refugees
in Bangladesh.
The no-man’s land,
which is about the size of 40 soccer pitches, used to be an area of paddy
fields, but is now dotted with the tarpaulin and bamboo shacks of displaced Rohingya.
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