SHAIKH AZIZUR RAHMAN
Refugee
rights activists say Bangladesh 
is acting against international humanitarian law in turning back Rohingya
refugees from Myanmar Dhaka  says it is doing nothing wrong
and must put its own people first.
Ignoring appeals
from international community, Bangladesh 
is sticking to its stand not to allow any Rohingya refugee inside its territory
as every week boatloads of Rohingyas are seeking to flee Myanmar 
The ethnic violence
that broke out in Arakan state in Myanmar Myanmar 
In the past six
weeks more than 1,300 Rohingya men, women and children sought to cross over to Bangladesh 
Little more than a
hundred of the Rohingyas managed to sneak into Bangladesh 
in the first couple days after violence broke out in Myanmar Bangladesh 
"Boatloads of
Rohingyas from Myanmar Bangladesh 
After a widespread
ethnic conflict in Myanmar 
in 1978, thousands of Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh 
from Myanmar 
Persecution
by junta
After
Myanmar  stripped the
Rohingyas of citizenship and identified them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh , more Rohingyas began fleeing Myanmar 
In 1991, following
alleged persecution by military junta in another wave tens of thousands of
Rohingyas crossed over to Bangladesh Bangladesh 
But the trickle from
across the border continued, resulting in the number of Rohingya refugees
reaching 300,000 in Bangladesh Bangladesh 
In the illegal
Rohingya colonies where electricity and sanitation facilities are absent, the
refugees live in extreme poverty. In over-populated and poverty-stricken Bangladesh 
The refugees are
draining the local resources and it is resulting in increased poverty among
local people, many allege.
"The Rohingyas
are ready to work at a very low wage. So the local people are angry as their
jobs are being taken away by the refugees," said Jasimuddin, a police
officer in Cox's Bazar district, where most Rohingya refugees live.
"It leads to
conflicts between local people and the mostly illegal refugees. Many local
people are dead against the arrival of new refugees."
In 2009 Bangladesh Myanmar 
in a formal "push-back" process by Bangladesh 
In 2010 a UN Joint
Initiative [UNJI] sought to launch a 33-million-US-dollar project to alleviate
poverty in Cox's Bazar which could benefit the refugees as well as the local
population, the initiative said.
'Underhand
intentions'
But
Bangladesh  government
blocked the UNJI project- which was to be funded mostly by the EU and Australia 
Chris Lewa, the
director of Rohingya advocacy group Arakan Project said that extreme miseries
force the Rohingyas to flee Myanmar and that they should not be denied refuge
by Bangladesh.
"Bangladesh 
"The
international community is pressuring us to accept the refugee as per the
international customary law. It's unfair," said Foreign
Minister Moni.
"Right from the
time Rohingyas began taking refuge in Bangladesh 
'Impossible
situation, serious trouble'
Last
week in an official statement Myanmar president Thein Sein said, it's
"impossible" for Myanmar to accept the Rohingyas because they are
illegal immigrants and do not belong to the ethnicity of Myanmar.
"If Bangladesh  does not open its border, the poor
people will face very serious trouble," said Nurul Islam, a Rohingya
community leader in Bangladesh 
Some rights
activists and Rohingya issue experts said that - although the primary
responsibility to resolve the Rohingya issue lies with the Myanmar  government - by denying shelter to the
refugees, Bangladesh 
Kelley Currie, a
fellow with the Washington-based think tank Project 2049 Institute and a former
Asia policy adviser in the US State Department said that Bangladesh 
The first issue is
the basic international legal obligation not to return individuals who are
fleeing persecution for ethnic, religious or political reasons, said Currie.
"In this case
the Rohingyas clearly qualify as refugees if they are able to cross an
international border."
Writer: Shaikh
Azizur Rahman and edited by Richard Connor
First published in DeutscheWelles (DW) online

 
 
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