Rohingya men have just arrived
from Myanmar,
at an unidentified place in Cox's Bazar district, Bangladesh.
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Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh Vow Never to Return to
Myanmar
By Maas Hussain
Voice of America
January 1, 2017
Authorities in Dhaka have demanded that Myanmar repatriate
tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who crossed the border to escape what
they say is persecution, and are now living illegally in Bangladesh.
Myanmar says it will accept a small fraction of the refugee
population now in Bangladesh, but the Rohingya themselves say they are
unwilling to go back to Myanmar's Rakhine state. Refugee community leaders are
appealing to "Rohingya-friendly" countries to take them in.
Ko Ko Linn, a Rohingya community leader in Bangladesh, told
VOA that conditions in Myanmar had become unlivable, particularly in recent
weeks, and "they do not want to return to this anti-Rohingya
Myanmar."
Rohingyas who fled Myanmar over
the past decades live
in this decrepit Kutupalong illegal Rohingya refugee
colony in Cox’s Bazar district, Bangladesh.
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'Unlivable' situation
Linn, an executive member of the Arakan Rohingya National
Organization, said, "The Myanmar government and the country's
Buddhist-majority society have turned extremely hostile against the Rohingya
Muslims, turning the country into a hell for them."
An Amnesty International report last month accused Myanmar
security forces of being responsible for unlawful killings, multiple rapes and
the burning down of houses and entire villages in a "campaign of violence
against Rohingya people that may amount to crimes against humanity."
The Foreign Ministry of Bangladesh called in Myanmar's
ambassador Thursday to complain about the refugees and to demand an early
return of all Rohingya migrants to Myanmar.
Kamrul Ahsan, Bangladesh's Bilateral and Consular Secretary,
told Ambassador Myo Myint Than there is "deep concern at the continued
influx of Muslims" from Myanmar.
A Foreign Ministry statement in Dhaka said Ahsan asked
"the Myanmar government to urgently address the root cause of the
problem," so that the Rakhine Muslims are not forced to flee Myanmar and
seek shelter in Bangladesh.
Less than 1 percent can return
One day after that tense meeting in Dhaka, Myanmar said it
would agree to accept the return of fewer than 2,500 Rohingya from Bangladesh —
less than 1 percent of the total refugee population, which is estimated to be
at least 350,000 people.
Authorities in Yangon contend most of the impoverished
Rohingya now seeking shelter in Bangladesh are not citizens of Myanmar, because
they are descended from illegal immigrants who arrived years ago. The Rohingya,
however, claim their community has lived where Myanmar is located for several
centuries.
Separately, Bangladesh's foreign secretary, Shahidul Haque,
said Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi is expected to send a special envoy to
Bangladesh soon, to take stock of the Rohingya refugee situation.
Violence directed at Rohingya Muslims has broken out in
Myanmar sporadically in recent years, and members of the Muslim minority
fleeing persecution kept crossing over to southeastern Bangladesh, which lies
adjacent to their home villages in Rakhine state. The situation worsened considerably
11 weeks ago, however, after nine Myanmar border guards were killed in an armed
attack blamed on Rohingya militants.
Refugee tide swelled recently
A military crackdown in Myanmar that followed the border
attack has been blamed for human rights abuses including extrajudicial
killings, rapes and arson in Rohingya villages. In those recent weeks up to
50,000 Rohingya men, women and children have crossed into Bangladesh seeking
safety.
Bangladeshi officials' estimates of the Rohingya population
vary, but most contend there are 350,000 to 500,000 Rohingyas living in
Bangladesh, over 90 percent of whom are illegal refugees.
Bangladesh, one of the world's most densely populated
countries, has long complained that its congested urban areas and villages
cannot cope with the burden of Rohingya refugees pouring into the country.
About 10 years ago, Bangladesh quietly adopted a policy to push the refugees
back to Myanmar, yet the Rohingyas have consistently managed to return,
slipping through the porous border, usually by river crossings.
Authorities in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, claimed
that all the allegations of abuses, killings and rapes by soldiers are fictitious,
but such complaints by newly arrived refugees have increased dramatically since
October. The Rohingya say they have been the victims of violence by Buddhists
in Rakhine, also known as Moghs, as well as government soldiers.
Hasina Begum, who has been staying in the illegal Rohingya
settlement of Kutupalong in Bangladesh since November, said that under no
circumstances would she agree to return to Myanmar.
"Soldiers and Moghs were raping and torturing the
people around us. My children were murdered. I was beaten and they broke my
waist. My husband was taken away by the soldiers and he has disappeared since
then," Begum told VOA.
"Moghs looted my house before burning it. … Unable to
bear this torture I have fled to Bangladesh," she continued.
"If Bangladesh says we must go back, we shall kill
ourselves. But we will not return to Myanmar," the Rohingya woman added.
Nuruzzaman, a 55-year-old Rohingya man, told VOA, "I
had eight members in my family. I lost three of them, including my young
daughter, to the violence there. To save our lives five of us have fled to
Bangladesh. ... In Burma they say, 'You belong to Bangladesh.' In Bangladesh
they are saying, 'you belong to Burma.'
"Where shall we go? ... The world is so big. Is there
not some space for the Rohingyas to live?"
Noor Ayesha, 40, and her daughter
at an illegal
Rohingya settlement in Bangladesh.
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Hoping to refuge in Muslim-majority countries
Nuruzzaman said he hoped Muslim-majority countries like
Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia or Turkey, all of whom have been
sympathetic to the Rohingyas' cause, could provide refuge.
"They can perhaps arrange our transportation from
Bangladesh to their countries by ship or plane," the refugee told VOA.
"That way, perhaps, the Rohingyas could be saved from dying a bad death
here."
Nurul Islam, a Britain-based Rohingya rights activist and
community leader, said that there is an exodus from Rakhine state because
Rohingyas there "are desperate to save their lives."
"By just crossing a river they can reach safety, they
know," said Islam, who is president of the Arakan Rohingya National
Organization, told VOA.
"If Bangladesh really does not want to host these
refugees any more and some other countries are willing to help," Islam
told VOA, "we will be thankful if those countries offer temporary refuge
to this hapless community."