Myanmar prepares for first Rohingya returnees, but UN warns against rushing
Myanmar officials said on Sunday the country was ready to receive more
than 2,000 Rohingya Muslims sheltering in Bangladesh on Nov. 15, the
first group from 5,000 people to be moved under a deal between the
neighbours struck last month.
YANGON/COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh: Myanmar officials said on Sunday the
country was ready to receive more than 2,000 Rohingya Muslims sheltering
in Bangladesh on Nov. 15, the first group from 5,000 people to be moved
under a deal between the neighbours struck last month.
But more than 20 individuals on a list of potential returnees submitted
by Bangladesh have told Reuters they will refuse to go back to northern
Rakhine state from where they fled. Bangladesh has said it will not
force anyone to do so.
The United Nations also says conditions are not yet safe for their
return, in part because Myanmar Buddhists have been protesting against
the repatriation.
"It depends on the other country, whether this will actually happen or
not," Win Myat Aye, Myanmar's Minister for Social Welfare and
Resettlement, told a news conference in the commercial capital of Yangon
on Sunday, referring to Bangladesh.
"But we must be ready from our side. We have done that."
Abul Kalam, Bangladesh Relief and Repatriation Commissioner, said he was hopeful the process could begin on Thursday.
"The return will be voluntary. Nobody will be forced to go back," he told Reuters.
The countries agreed on mid-November for the start of repatriating some
of more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims who fled a sweeping army crackdown
in Myanmar last year.
They say soldiers and local Buddhists massacred families, burned
hundreds of villages, and carried out gang-rapes. U.N-mandated
investigators have accused the army of "genocidal intent" and ethnic
cleansing.
Myanmar denies almost all of the allegations, saying security forces
were battling terrorists. Attacks by Rohingya insurgents calling
themselves the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army preceded the crackdown.
Myanmar does acknowledge the killing of 10 Rohingya by security forces
in Inn Dinn village. Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo were
sentenced to seven years in prison earlier this year for allegedly
breaking the country's Official Secrets Act after reporting on the
massacre.
Reuters says the court's ruling was wrong and lawyers for the two have appealed against their conviction.
Win Myat Aye said preparations had been made for 2,251 people to be
transported to two transit centres by boat on Thursday, while a second
group of 2,095 could follow later by road.
Once processed by the authorities, they would be sent to another centre
where they would be housed, fed, and asked to build homes through
cash-for-work schemes.
Returnees would only be allowed to travel within Maungdaw township, one
of the three they fled, and only if they accepted National Verification
Cards, an identity document most Rohingya reject because they say it
brands them as foreigners.
Many Rohingya, the majority of whom have been left stateless after
decades of persecution, oppose going back without guarantees of
citizenship and freedom of movement.
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