Press TV
Tue Jul 11, 2017
UN High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) Filippo Grandi has expressed concerns about the poor
living conditions of Rohingya Muslim refugees, who have fled a “very dire
state” in their homeland Myanmar to neighboring Bangladesh.
He made the remarks
after visiting two refugee camps in the Bangladeshi city of Cox’s Bazar, which
borders Myanmar’s Rakhine State. Cox’s Bazar hosts hundreds of thousands of
Rohingya refugees.
Grandi added that
Rohingya refugees may stay “for some more time” in squalid Bangladeshi camps as
Myanmar officials had said the verification procedure for refugees before any
repatriation would be lengthy.
“We offered our
technical expertise (to Myanmar). I think it’s possible that refugees will stay
here in Bangladesh for some more time,” he said.
The UNHCR chief
further warned that the minority Muslim group is facing a “very dire state in
northern Rakhine,” Myanmar's state where they are mainly based.
The UNHCR chief
stressed that any relocation should occur voluntarily.
“None should be
forcefully relocated,” Grandi said.
Rakhine has been the
scene of communal violence at the hands of Buddhist extremists since 2012.
Hundreds of people have been killed and tens of thousands forced from their
homes to live in squalid camps in dire conditions in Myanmar, Bangladesh,
Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.
The government
denies full citizenship to the 1.1 million-strong Rohingya population, branding
them illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. These as the Rohingya are believed to
be a community of ancient lineage in Myanmar.
According to the UN,
the Rohingya are one of the most persecuted minorities in the world.
“Struck by sense of
despair of refugees in Cox’s Bazaar: tangible progress in Myanmar & better
opportunities can restore trust in the future,” Grandi also said on his twitter
account on Monday.
In January,
authorities in Bangladesh controversially decided to encamp tens of thousands
of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar to the remote island of Thengar Char in the
Bay of Bengal, which is prone to monsoonal flooding.
The plan has been
met with an international outcry.
Bangladesh hosts
more than 400,000 Rohingya Muslims, including about 73,000 who have fled
persecution and violence in Myanmar since the army launched a crackdown in the
northwestern Rakhine State early October.
There have been
numerous accounts by eyewitnesses of summary executions, rapes and arson
attacks against Muslims since the crackdown began. The military has blocked
access to Rakhine and banned journalists and aid workers from entering the
zone.
http://presstv.com//Detail/2017/07/11/528088/UN-Myanmar-Rohingyas-Bangladesh
Also read here: UNHCR head urges a
rapid resolution of the Rohingya refugee problem in Bangladesh: https://shar.es/1BPhwx