Yahoo – AFP,
Jerome Taylor, 29 May 2015
![]() |
Rohingya
migrants stand and sit on a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern
island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea on May 14, 2015 (AFP Photo/Christophe
Archambault)
|
Myanmar and
Bangladesh agreed to address the "root causes" of a migrant exodus
from their shores at talks in Bangkok Friday, but critics pilloried a deal that
failed to mention the Rohingya minority at the heart of the crisis.
Southeast
Asia's migrant scandal began to unfurl at the start of this month after a Thai
crackdown on people smuggling threw the multi-million dollar industry into
disarray.
![]() |
Jamal, a 37
year old Rohingya migrant
from Myanmar stands outside a tent at
a confinement camp in the Bayeun
district of
Indonesia's Aceh province,
on May 28, 2015 (AFP Photo/Chaideer
Mahyuddin)
|
The Thai
hosts described the day-long talks as "very constructive", saying all
17 countries at the meeting agreed on a statement to provide humanitarian help
to 2,500 migrants believed to still be adrift at sea, as well as to the 3,500
who have already made it to Thai, Malaysian and Indonesian shores since May 1.
The
statement also drew a commitment to address the "root causes" and
"factors in areas of (migrants') origin", including improving the
economy, human rights and security in the source countries.
But the
document did not mention the Rohingya -- who Myanmar refuses to recognise as an
official minority.
Myanmar
denies citizenship to the majority of its 1.3 million Rohingya and calls them
"Bengalis" -- shorthand for foreigners from neighbouring Bangladesh.
![]() |
Rohingya
migrants from Myanmar gather
at a confinement area in Bayeun on
northern Sumatra island, May 28, 2015
(AFP Photo/Chaideer Mahyuddin)
|
Communal
violence in 2012 between Rohingya and the Buddhist majority in Rakhine State
brought their plight to the fore.
'Band aid
on a gaping wound'
Bangladesh
recognises some 30,000 Rohingya as refugees but tens of thousands more are
treated as illegal migrants from Myanmar.
Welcoming
the outcome of the meeting, Shahidul Haque, head of the Bangladeshi delegation,
told reporters "we had a very productive discussion today."
Others were
less impressed with Friday's talks.
Charles
Santiago, chair of the ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights and a Malaysian
lawmaker, described the meeting as "lots of talk with little genuine
substance or resolve to take any action whatsoever."
![]() |
Rohingya
migrants from Myanmar
gather at a confinement area in Bayeun
on northern
Sumatra island, on May 28,
2015 (AFP Photo/Chaideer Mahyuddin)
|
Phil
Robertson of Human Rights watch Asia called the talks "a band aid on a
gaping wound."
"The
Rohingya are not even named in the statement... how can you talk about a people
if you don't name them?"
Bangkok
began its belated crackdown on the smuggling trade in the country's deep south
on May 1, after dozens of bodies were pulled from mass graves in a remote
border area studded by migrant camps.
All three
nations say they now are actively searching for any remaining boats adrift in
their waters.
Myanmar's
Rohingya are one of the world's most persecuted minorities.
They face
restrictions on movement, jobs and family size, while their pariah status means
they are unrepresented -- even Myanmar's democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi
chooses not to exert her moral authority on their behalf.
The former
junta-led quasi-civilian government has balked at any criticism of its
treatment of the community and has previously threatened to pull out of the
talks altogether if the word Rohingya is used.





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