Yahoo – AFP,
November 23, 2017
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| The United Nations says 620,000 Rohingya Muslims have arrived in Bangladesh since a military crackdown in Myanmar in August, to form the world's largest refugee camp (AFP Photo/Munir UZ ZAMAN) |
Yangon
(AFP) - Bangladesh and Myanmar will start repatriating refugees in two months,
Dhaka said Thursday, as global pressure mounts over a crisis that has forced
more than half a million Rohingya to flee across the border.
The United
Nations says 620,000 Rohingya have arrived in Bangladesh since August and now
live in squalor in the world's largest refugee camp after a military crackdown
in Myanmar that Washington said this week clearly constitutes "ethnic
cleansing".
After months
of wrangling, Myanmar's civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and Dhaka's Foreign
Minister A.H. Mahmood Ali inked a deal in Myanmar's capital Naypyidaw on
Thursday.
Dhaka said
they had agreed to start returning the refugees to mainly Buddhist Myanmar in
two months.
It said
that a working group would be set up within three weeks to agree the
arrangements for the repatriation.
"This
is a primary step. (They) will take back (Rohingya). Now we have to start
working," Ali told reporters in Naypyidaw.
Impoverished
and overcrowded Bangladesh has won international praise for allowing the
refugees into the country, but has imposed restrictions on their movements and
said it does not want them to stay.
Myanmar,
meanwhile, has bristled at the growing chorus of global criticism.
Aung San
Suu Kyi, a one-time heroine of the human rights movement whose halo has been
badly tarnished, shot back Thursday at foreign interference in what she said
was a "bilateral" issue.
"Western
countries as well the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) had portrayed
the matter as an international issue by passing resolutions at the UN Human
Rights Council and the General Assembly of the United Nations," her office
said in a statement.
"The
principled position of Myanmar is that issues that emerge between neighbouring
countries must be resolved amicably through bilateral negotiations."
Thursday's
agreement is a "win-win situation for both countries", the statement
added.
'Horrendous
atrocities'
The
tentative deal comes the day after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who met
with Suu Kyi in Myanmar last week, issued Washington’s strongest-yet
denunciation.
"It is
clear that the situation in northern Rakhine state constitutes ethnic cleansing
against the Rohingya," Tillerson said.
"No
provocation can justify the horrendous atrocities that have ensued."
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The UN
Children's Fund, UNICEF, has estimates that 25,000 children in the
overcrowded
Rohingya camps are suffering from severe malnutrition (AFP
Photo/Munir UZ
ZAMAN)
|
The tide of
desperate humanity that has poured over the riverine border into Bangladesh is
thick with horrifying stories of rape, murder and arson at the hands of
Myanmar's military and Buddhist mobs.
The Burmese
army insists its crackdown has been proportionate and targeted only at Rohingya
rebels.
Thursday's
outline deal offered no detail on how many Rohingya will be allowed back and
how long the process will take.
The
European Union's top diplomat, Federica Mogherini, said it was "an
important and welcomed step towards addressing one of the worst humanitarian
and human rights crises of our times".
Mogherini,
who visited Myanmar on Monday, urged both nations to act swiftly to enable the
"voluntary, safe and dignified return" of the refugees, in a
statement.
Rights
groups have raised concerns about the repatriation plans, including questioning
where the minority will be resettled after hundreds of their villages were
razed, and how their safety will be ensured in a country where anti-Muslim
sentiment is surging.
'Won't go
back'
The
stateless Rohingya have been the target of communal violence and vicious
anti-Muslim sentiment in mainly Buddhist Myanmar for years.
They have
also been systematically oppressed by the government, which stripped the
minority of citizenship and severely restricts their movement, as well as their
access to basic services.
![]() |
More than
half a million Rohingya have fled across the frontier into Bangladesh
since
August, carrying harrowing stories of violence (AFP Photo/Munir UZ ZAMAN)
|
Tensions
erupted into bouts of bloodshed in 2012 that pushed more than 100,000 Rohingya
into grim displacement camps.
Despite the
squalid conditions in the overcrowded camps in Bangladesh, many of the refugees
say they are reluctant to return to Myanmar unless they are granted full
citizenship.
"We
won't go back to Myanmar unless all Rohingya are granted citizenship with full
rights like any other Myanmar nationals," said Abdur Rahim, 52, who was a
teacher at a government-run school in Buthidaung in Myanmar's Rakhine state
before fleeing across the border.
"We
won't return to any refugee camps in Rakhine," he told AFP in Bangladesh.
The signing
of the deal came ahead of a highly-anticipated visit to both nations from Pope
Francis, who has been outspoken about his sympathy for the plight of the
Rohingya.
The latest
unrest occurred after Rohingya rebels attacked police posts on August 25.
The army
backlash rained violence across northern Rakhine, with refugees recounting
nightmarish scenes of soldiers and Buddhist mobs slaughtering villagers and
burning down entire communities.
The
military denies all allegations but has restricted access to the conflict zone.
Suu Kyi's
government has blocked visas for a UN-fact finding mission tasked with probing
accusations of military abuse.
A tiny outpost of Catholicism in Myanmar prepares for visit by Pope Francis in 2018 pic.twitter.com/ftOjT7ScRP— AFP news agency (@AFP) November 23, 2017




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