FIRST ROHINGYA REFUGEES REPATRIATED TO MYANMAR DESPITE UN SAFETY FEARS
Members of a Rohingya family show their ID cards. Photograph: Ministry of Information of Myanmer Human rights groups slam move as publicity stunt while Bangladesh distances itself. |
Human rights groups slam
move as publicity stunt while Bangladesh distances itself.
Myanmar says it has
repatriated the first Rohingya refugees from among nearly 700,000 who fled a
crackdown in the country last year despite warnings from the United Nations
that it is not yet safe to return.
Rights groups have
criticised the announcement as a publicity stunt and Bangladesh has distanced
itself, saying the repatriation was not part of the return process the two
countries have been trying to start.
A member of a Rohingya family is issued with her ID card. Photograph: Ministry of Information |
The stateless Muslim
minority have been massing in squalid refugee camps across the border in
Bangladesh since the Myanmar army launched a brutal campaign against the
community in northern Rakhine state in August.
The Myanmar
government announced late on Saturday that a family of refugees had become the
first to be processed in newly built repatriation centres earlier that day.
“The five members of
a family ..... came back to Taungpyoletwei town repatriation camp in Rakhine
state this morning,” said a statement posted to the Facebook page of the
government’s information committee.
Bangladesh’s refugee
commissioner, Mohammad Abul Kalam, told Agence France-Presse the family had
been living in a camp erected on a patch of “no man’s land” between the two
countries.
Several thousand
Rohingya have been living in the zone since August, crammed into a cluster of
tents beyond a barbed-wire fence that roughly demarcates the border zone
between the two countries.
“They were not under
our jurisdiction, therefore we cannot confirm whether there would be more
people waiting to go back [to Myanmar],” he told AFP.
Bangladesh and
Myanmar agreed a repatriation plan in January but its start has been repeatedly
delayed as both sides blame the other for lack of preparation.
According to the
Myanmar statement, immigration authorities provided the family with national
verification cards, a form of ID that falls short of citizenship and has been
rejected by Rohingya leaders who want full rights.
The family members
were scrutinised by immigration and health ministry officials and the social
welfare, relief and resettlement ministry provided them with “materials such as
rice, mosquito netting, blankets, t-shirt, longyis [Burmese sarong] and kitchen
utensils”, the government said.
Myanmar officials
could not be reached for further details and the post did not say whether any
more returns were expected soon.
The move comes
despite warnings from the UN and other rights groups that a mass repatriation
of Rohingya would be premature, as Myanmar has yet to address the systematic
legal discrimination and persecution the minority has faced for decades.
The UN has said the
military-led operations that started last August amount to ethnic cleansing,
but Myanmar has denied the charge, saying its troops targeted Rohingya
militants.
Andrea Giorgetta
from the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) criticised the
repatriation announcement as “a public relations exercise in an attempt to
deflect attention from the need for accountability for crimes committed in
Rakhine state”.
Last week, the most
senior UN official to visit Myanmar this year, the assistant secretary general
for humanitarian affairs, Ursula Mueller, said conditions in Myanmar were not
conducive to the return of the refugees.
She cited a
continued lack of access to health services, concerns among the Rohingya about
protection and continued displacements. She also described conditions in camps
for internally displaced people from previous bouts of violence as
“deplorable”.
Many Rohingya
refugees say they fear returning to a country where they saw their relatives
murdered by soldiers and Buddhist vigilantes who drove them from their homes.
Boats with Rohingya
from parts of Rakhine state have continued leaving Myanmar in recent months.
The latest confirmed departure took place on Thursday.
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