Burma, Bangladesh Need to Redraft Agreement, Involve UN
HRW (New York) – An agreement by Bangladesh and Burma to
begin returning Rohingya refugees to Burma by January 23, 2018, creates an
impossible timetable for safe and voluntary returns and should be shelved,
Human Rights Watch today said in a letter to the two governments.
Read here in detail: https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/supporting_resources/201712letter_myanmar_bangladesh.pdf
International donors, who would be needed to fund the
massive repatriation effort, should insist that Burma and Bangladesh invite the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to join in drafting a new
tripartite agreement that ensures adherence to international standards.
Since late August 2017, more than 645,000 ethnic Rohingya
have fled a campaign of ethnic cleansing by Burma’s security forces and sought
asylum in Bangladesh. Human Rights Watch has interviewed more than 200 of the
refugees. Many said that they wish to eventually return home, but that they do
not believe it is safe to return to Burma for the foreseeable future and until
their security, land, and livelihoods can be ensured.
“Burma has yet to end its military abuses against the
Rohingya, let alone create conditions that would allow them to return home
safely,” said Bill Frelick, refugee rights director at Human Rights Watch.
“This agreement looks more like a public relations effort by Burma to quickly
close this ugly chapter than a serious effort to restore the rights of Rohingya
and allow them to voluntarily return in safety and dignity.”
On November 23, Bangladesh and Burma signed an
“Arrangement on Return of Displaced Persons from Rakhine State” on behalf of
“residents of Rakhine State” who crossed from Burma into Bangladesh after
October 9, 2016 and August 25, 2017. The agreement makes no reference to the
cause of most of the forced displacement: a campaign of killings, widespread
rape, and mass arson carried out by Burmese security forces that amounted to
crimes against humanity. The agreement also fails to identify the displaced
either as Rohingya or as refugees.
Voluntary repatriation in safety and dignity as required
by international law will not be feasible until the Burmese government
demonstrates its willingness and ability to ensure full respect for returnees’
human rights, equal access to nationality, and security, Human Rights Watch
said.
The agreement expresses Burma’s commitment to “take
necessary measures to halt the outflow of Myanmar residents to Bangladesh” –
which raises grave concerns since everyone has a right to flee persecution in
their own country. The agreement also makes no direct reference to
nonrefoulement, the principle of international refugee law that prohibits the
forcible return of refugees to places where their lives or freedom would be
threatened. And the agreement restricts returnees’ freedom of movement to
Rakhine State in “conformity with existing laws and regulations,” many of which
discriminate against the Rohingya.
Several Burmese officials have spoken about putting
Rohingya in “camps.” This would be an unacceptable approach to their return as
camps set up after previous anti-Rohingya violence have led to de facto
detention and segregation.
While the agreement says that Bangladesh will immediately
seek assistance from UNHCR to carry out safe and voluntary returns, Burma
agrees only “that the services of the UNHCR could be drawn upon as needed and
at the appropriate time.”
“After the widespread atrocities, safe and voluntary
return of Rohingya will require international monitors on the ground in Burma,”
Frelick said. “This means a central role for the UNHCR, the only UN agency with
a statutory mandate to facilitate the voluntary repatriation of refugees.”
Given the critical flaws in the agreement, Burma and
Bangladesh should invite UNHCR to join in the drafting of a new tripartite
agreement, Human Rights Watch said. This should include some existing
provisions, such as encouraging refugees “to return voluntarily and safely to
their own households and original places of residence or to a safe and secure
place nearest to it or their choice.” The current agreement also commits Burma
“to see that the returnees will not be settled in temporary places for a long
time.”
Source: https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/12/11/burma-rohingya-return-deal-bad-refugees
Source: https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/12/11/burma-rohingya-return-deal-bad-refugees