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How Pakistan can help the Rohingya

EastBengalPro

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By Omar Waraich, Deputy South Asia Director Anjuman Para, Bangladesh,
13 November 2017, 11:09 UTC

STANDING by Bangladesh’s border with Myanmar, we watched the refugees slowly cross the thick, lime-green paddy fields. They wore signs of exhaustion. Their faces were drawn and their bare feet badly bruised. They gratefully accepted the rations being offered by aid workers: a bottle of water to quench their thirst, a high-energy biscuit to restore their strength, and an offer of rest in the shade after days, sometimes weeks-long, arduous journeys.

A European aid worker suddenly turned to me and asked, “Do you think there’s any Western country that would take in this many people?” It was a question that did not anticipate an answer. At a time when refugees face what Pope Francis has hauntingly termed “the globalisation of indifference”, Bangladesh stands out for opening its doors.

Over the past two months, more than 600,000 Rohingya refugees have fled killings, rape, torture and arson to seek sanctuary in Bangladesh. Dozens did not make it, drowning in capsized boats. Thousands are still making the journey, fearing persecution in a land where they are constantly demonised as ‘Bengali terrorists’ and ‘illegal migrants’. If one adds the numbers of Rohingya who were already here, cast out of their villages by earlier waves of violence, there are now nearly a million refugees scattered across Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar District. They now outnumber those still left in their homeland.

In the past, they were reluctantly admitted into the country. “The Bangladesh government has traditionally seen the Rohingya as people who need to be controlled, rather than supported,” a UN official in Bangladesh told me. There have been pushbacks, and even attempts to starve them out of the camps. In 1979, when more than 200,000 Rohingya took refuge in Bangladesh’s camps, 10,000 of them perished of hunger within months.

Pakistan has a clear role to play here — one that it has yet to assume. As a close ally of China, it must prevail upon Beijing to apply pressure on the Myanmar military
Omar Waraich



This time could prove different. As the details of the crimes against humanity visited upon the Rohingya spread across Bangladesh, there was a wave of popular sympathy. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina shed her ambivalence and embraced them. On a visit to the camps in early September, she said that if Bangladesh could feed more than 170 million Bangladeshis, it could feed the new arrivals, too. The ruling Awami League has since adorned lampposts across Cox’s Bazar with signs hailing Sheikh Hasina as “the mother of humanity”, proudly showing her comforting Rohingya children.

But patience appears to be wearing thin. The Bangladeshi government has made no secret of the fact that it wants the Rohingya to return to Myanmar as soon as possible. Ministers now daily warn of the security risks that may emanate from the camps and the burden on their poor, densely populated country.

Bangladesh has denied the Rohingya refugee status. They are being kept away from the local community, consigned to a ‘mega camp’ where they are being squeezed into an endless sprawl of flimsy bamboo and tarpaulin tents. The government has shunned the humanitarian community’s pleas for multiple sites for easy access, and it is still toying with dangerous ideas of relocating all of the Rohingya refugees offshore, on to a pair of uninhabitable silt islands.

Every Rohingya refugee I spoke to expressed a desire to go home — but only once shanti, or peace, returns. Sadly, that is unlikely to be anytime soon. Much will depend on the very generals in the Myanmar army, who have presided over ruthlessly efficient ethnic cleansing operations, and who appear to see the expulsion of the Rohingya as a solution rather than a problem.

Bangladesh already feels isolated. Its larger neighbours have been of little help. China has squarely sided with Myanmar. India has recently softened its position, expressing some concern for the violence in Rakhine state, without assigning any blame. The government of Narendra Modi hasn’t ruled out its plans to forcibly return 40,000 Rohingya refugees currently in India to Myanmar, in brazen violation of international law.

Pakistan has a clear role to play here — one that it has yet to assume. As a close ally of China, it must prevail upon Beijing to apply pressure on the Myanmar military, including halting sales of weaponry to Myanmar — not least the 16 Chinese-Pakistani fighter jets due to be delivered this year. Myanmar’s generals are counting on the support of its powerful neighbour to shield it from scrutiny and accountability.

Pakistan should also offer Bangladesh whatever support it can to host the Rohingya refugees in humane, sustainable and dignified conditions — a move that would only enhance Pakistan’s reputation in the region and beyond.

This must not become another human tragedy that dominates headlines for a few days, stirs outrage on the streets, and then fades from people’s attentions while victims continue to suffer for months and years. The Rohingya have suffered far too much to be abandoned yet again.

https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2017/11/how-pakistan-can-help-the-rohingya/
 
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Why is Pakistan even mentioned?? Pakistan can't do anything, Myanmar is 1800 miles away. Pakistan ' pressuring ' China won't yield any results either. Nor will halting the sale of the JF-17s, they'll simply opt for someone else. Business is business.

Pakistan has absolutely no leeway against Myanmar. Unfortunately, the only thing we can do is condemn their actions.
 
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When there was a crises in Afghanistan Pakistan took in the most number of refugees from Afghanistan and provided them with living rights with in Pakistan the number of refugees which Pakistan took in is to date the highest number ever in the history of the world. Not only that Pakistan won their home land back from soviet union a then Super power and never kept an inch of that land and returned those refugees to their home land safely with a single case of any type miss treatment now give one example in the world where even Europe has lived up to this standard, none is available so similarly it is time for Myanmar neighbors to show how good they are. Lets start from Bangladesh and India they should take in those refugees which are just a fraction of any refugees crises and stop screaming lol. What the hell are Bangladesh and India doing. Send these refugees to Hasina's house and have dinner there.
 
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My personal view is that there are only a few percent Rohyngya but the rest of them are people from Bangladesh who slipped into Myanmar in past a few decades, so, if someone asks me, I would say Pakistan should stay away from this issue. Mr. Wariach should keep his suggestion with himself.
 
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1)By doing more trade with the Burmese.
2)Creating an influence in the circles there.
3)Using that influence to express our concerns regarding the refugee crisis in the region and how Pakistan os one of the affected countries.
4)Helping them and its neighborly states to manage the Rohingya people on THEIR lands and lobby to get UN sponsor temporary settlements .
5)Pakistan can send teams comprising religious clerics, philanthropists and doctors to treat and help the Rohingya with putting their lives back on the track.
The permanent solution can only come from Yangoon.
 
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Who knows! Seem Myanmar insist on it's right what they are doing. The room for compromise is limit.
Though it is good joke to break the silence but I don't think there is any reality in this phenomenon. I think this is humans we're talking about, not Myanmar or Bangladesh and it will be gross injustice if Bangladesh and Myanmar reach to such conclusion without consent and willingness of people they're trading.
 
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Though it is good joke to break the silence but I don't think there is any reality in this phenomenon. I think this is humans we're talking about, not Myanmar or Bangladesh and it will be gross injustice if Bangladesh and Myanmar reach to such conclusion without consent and willingness of people they're trading.

So far Rohingya muslim and Myanmar have same wills. Rohingya don't want to live in Myanmar and Myanmar don't want Rohingya to live there. The problem is that Rohingya can't find another place to live in.
So many muslim nations are in Asia, Middle East and Africa, each nation receive 10,000 persons, almost all Rohingya can find living place. Only a small town can hold 10,000 persons. China once received 300,000 Vietnamese Chinese, government prepare several counties for them. It's not hard, if you are really glad to do something for them.
 
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So far Rohingya muslim and Myanmar have same wills. Rohingya don't want to live in Myanmar and Myanmar don't want Rohingya to live there. The problem is that Rohingya can't find another place to live in.
So many muslim nations are in Asia, Middle East and Africa, each nation receive 10,000 persons, almost all Rohingya can find living place. Only a small town can hold 10,000 persons. China once received 300,000 Vietnamese Chinese, government prepare several counties for them. It's not hard, if you are really glad to do something for them.
Pakistan already hosting more than 300,000 Rohingya Refugees for several decades - I don't know and cannot say anything about other nations. But one thing I can say sure is that no one would prefer to be refugee instead of living in his/her home in peace. In case of human crises situation, it's responsibility of immediate neighboring nations to host the persecuted people. Next circle of nations activates when persecutor and immediate neighbors turn out to inhumane.

PS: What you're suggesting is accepting human barbarity and moving on - this is not something new either, we tried it before when we took in those refugees last and it doesn't work in my view because they did it again and will continue to do that.
 
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I don't even know which bottom feeder wrote this article. There will be no pressure of Myanmar from either India or China. Reason :
1. China is already a close ally to Tatmadaw.
2. Tatmadaw is helping India by flushing out Naga separatists even allowing special ops in their territory on agreed upon parameters.
3. China has astronomically more Investments than India in Myanmar but neither India nor china wanna alienate it.

As far as role of Pakistan is concerned:
-> Send medical supplies and doctors .
-> Support in relief.

That's about it.
 
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The way we are helping Kashmir. (Moral/Diplomatic)
 
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Pakistan has 350,000 Rohingya.

Bangladesh now has higher per capita incomes vis-a-vis Pakistan and higher GDP growth than Pakistan, cant they support few hundred thousand.
 
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