India's recent deportation of seven Rohingya men to
Myanmar has triggered a panic among the country’s Rohingya Muslim refugee
community.
Since the seven men were deported in the past three
weeks, many Rohingya refugees have gone underground in India and some others
have crossed over to Bangladesh, fearing that they could be arrested, jailed or
returned to Myanmar.
“From Haryana, we were around 350 Rohingyas who fled to
West Bengal. After the deportation of those seven men we have all fled the West
Bengal camp. Some crossed over to Bangladesh. Others have fled to Jammu,
Haryana and other places [in India]. I too have moved to another part of India
where I am living in hiding now.”
The UNHCR issues identity cards to registered refugees to
help prevent their arbitrary arrest, detention and deportation. But after the
seven men were deported to Myanmar earlier this month, many Rohingyas in India
say they fear deportation despite holding UNHCR ID cards.
Cheryl D’Souza, member of a Delhi-based legal rights
activist group fighting for the rights of the refugees, also said the Rohingyas
are anxious about their future in India despite holding the UNHCR cards.
"Refoulement of the seven men to Myanmar was in
grave violation of India’s international obligations. The principle of
non-refoulement is [indeed] binding on India. It is enshrined in various
conventions that India has ratified, such as the ICCPR [International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights] and the Convention on Rights of the Child,"
he said.
“After [some people] set fire to our camp in [the north
Indian state of] Haryana, three times we fled to West Bengal. We lived
peacefully in West Bengal for seven months. After Indian authorities deported
seven Rohingyas to Myanmar we got scared. We began fearing that they could even
deport us,” said Abdul Goni, 29, who two weeks ago fled a Rohingya refugee camp
in West Bengal and is hiding with his wife and three children at an
unidentified location in southern India.
The Indian Home Ministry, which handles the issue or refugees,
declined to comment for this story.
Forced to flee
Facing discrimination and violence in Myanmar, minority
Rohingya Muslims have for decades fled Myanmar to neighboring Bangladesh and
other countries, including India.
Currently, approximately 40,000 Rohingya refugees live in
different locations across India. About 18,000 are registered with the office
of the UNHCR, the UN refugee agency.
Stateless, Rohingyas have no way to travel to any country
legally and their status as refugees is not always recognized. India did not
sign the 1951 U.N. Refugee Convention, and thus treats all Rohingyas entering
the country as illegal immigrants.
India has jailed some Rohingyas. The UNHCR estimates more
than 200 Rohingya are in Indian jails after being arrested and charged for
illegal entry. Rights groups say that figure is at least 500.
Among the Rohingyas who have gone in hiding in India or
fled to Bangladesh in the past few weeks, many are UNHCR card holders, said
Mohammad Junaid, a Rohingya community leader in Bangladesh.
“I know of over 100 Rohingya who have fled to Bangladesh
from India in the past weeks. Around 75 percent of them held refugee ID cards
issued by the UNHCR Delhi. Yet, they crossed over to Bangladesh because they
felt the cards could not protect them from actions by the Indian authorities,”
Junaid told VOA.
"While those who have been granted refugee cards and
protection by UNHCR cannot be arrested, the panic among the Rohingya regarding
arrest by the Indian authorities stems from the complete denial by the
government of recognizing the Rohingya as a refugee community in India that is
in need of protection and the deliberate terming of them as illegal immigrants
to buttress their claims in court for their expulsion,” D’Souza told VOA.
Anti-Rohingya sentiment
Rohingya refugees have lived in India peacefully for many
years. But sentiment against the Muslim minority group has been surging in
predominantly Hindu India after the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party
led by current Prime Minister Narendra Modi swept to power following a massive
election victory in 2014.
Last year in the north Indian city of Jammu, local BJP
leaders began a campaign demanding all Rohingya be expelled from the area. The
BJP-led Indian federal government subsequently ordered all states to identify
and deport all Rohingya Muslims from the country.
Two weeks ago, the government in India's northeastern state
of Assam announced that it was preparing to deport another batch of 23 detained
Rohingya that officials described as “illegal immigrants” to Myanmar.
Legal rights activist Prashant Bhushan, who is fighting
against the deportation of the Rohingya refugees in India, insists that no
Rohingya should be deported to Myanmar.
"A fact finding report by the United Nations Human
Rights Council has concluded that [the] Myanmarese military have been
responsible for committing crimes of genocide and crimes against humanity
against the Rohingya. Various other international organizations have warned
that conditions are not conducive for the safe return of Rohingya refugees who
have been subjected to torture and detained on repatriation. It is in this
context that we are opposing the deportation of the Rohingya refugees to
Myanmar,” said Bhushan.
Myanmar's government has consistently denied allegations
that its troops have committed atrocities against the Rohingya.
Altaf Hossen, a Rohingya who fled a camp in West Bengal
two weeks ago and crossed over to Bangladesh, said he made a wise decision by
leaving India.
“Hindu majority India is growing hostile for Muslim
Rohingya refugees. We were facing violence. We held UNHCR cards. Yet, we faced
threats of being deported to Myanmar,” Hossen told VOA. “India is unsafe for
all Rohingyas. All Rohingyas should leave India for Bangladesh or other
countries.”
Source: VOA