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Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing - Updates & Discussions

Really?
Myanmar cannot beat the many other ethnic groups that are fighting it.
Arakan is mainly jungles and mountains and ideal guerilla country.
Well trained and well armed Rohingyas will turn Arakan into hell for Myanmar, both economically and militarily.
Rohingya activities in Arakan will bleed Myanmar dry. It is relying on Arakan to boost it's tiny 70 US billion dollar economy.
If anyone thinks that BD will allow Myanmar to get away with this, they need to think again.
the crisis started in 2015... all i see is more misery and more rohingyas on bd shore...
anyway I was merely replying to your 'will be dealt with' post, who is going to fight myanmar, and when? the time is ticking... pretty sure @Banglar Bir will agree
 
Really?
Myanmar cannot beat the many other ethnic groups that are fighting it.
Arakan is mainly jungles and mountains and ideal guerilla country.
Well trained and well armed Rohingyas will turn Arakan into hell for Myanmar, both economically and militarily.
Rohingya activities in Arakan will bleed Myanmar dry. It is relying on Arakan to boost it's tiny 70 US billion dollar economy.
If anyone thinks that BD will allow Myanmar to get away with this, they need to think again.

Lol China will never allow separatist movement in arakan. If you arm rohingyas they will massacre remaining rohingyas. China will back Myanmar in UNSC. Best option for Bangladesh is deport rohingyas back to Myanmar via UN sponsored dialogue
 
Lol China will never allow separatist movement in arakan. If you arm rohingyas they will massacre remaining rohingyas. China will back Myanmar in UNSC. Best option for Bangladesh is deport rohingyas back to Myanmar via UN sponsored dialogue

What will China do? Send their army in?
If UN process does not work, then alternative methods will be used.
 
This is not 1970s. you can't directly support armed insurgency in your neighbour country

BD has every right to send Rohingya back.
Myanmar has no real support bar China and so
BD will be free to deal with them as it sees fit.

Russia and India cannot support their economy and so do not count.
 
BD has every right to send Rohingya back.
Myanmar has no real support bar China and so
BD will be free to deal with them as it sees fit.

Russia and India cannot support their economy and so do not count.

This is what i said. Send them back to Myanmar via dialogue. If u support armed insurgency the ultimate sufferers will be rohingyas
 
Return of Rohingyas to restore normalcy, says Indian FM
Dhaka wants Delhi to exert sustained pressure on Myanmar
SAM Report, October 23, 2017
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Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Sunday (Oct 22) said it is clear that normalcy over the Rohingya issue will be restored only with the return of the displaced people to Rakhine state.

“India is deeply concerned at the spate of violence in Rakhine State of Myanmar. We’ve urged that the situation be handled with restraint, keeping in mind the welfare of the population,” she said.

Sushma said they have also supported the implementation of the recommendations contained in the Kofi Annan led Special Advisory Commission report on Rakhine State.

The Indian External Affairs Minister came up with India’s position over Rohingya issue at a joint briefing after the fourth Joint Consultative Commission (JCC) meeting between Bangladesh and India held at Sonargaon Hotel in the city.

She also laid emphasis on creating economic opportunities in Rakhaine. “In our view, the only long-term solution to the situation in Rakhine State is rapid socio-economic and infrastructure development that would have a positive impact on all the communities living in the State.”

India, she said, for its part, has committed to providing financial and technical assistance for identified projects to be taken in Rakhine in conjunction with the local authorities.

Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali said Bangladesh urged India to contribute towards “exerting sustained pressure” on Myanmar to find a peaceful solution to Rohingya crisis including sustainable return off all Rohingyas to their homeland.

“We’re happy to be reassured that India would continue to support the humanitarian cause related to Rohingyas in Bangladesh,” he said.

Minister Ali thanked the Indian side for humanitarian assistance provided for Roihingyas.

Around 6 lakh Rohingyas entered Bangladesh since August 25 and the aid agencies struggling to meet their growing need with limited resources.

India launched ‘Operation Insaniyat’ in September to support the government of Bangladesh in its commendable efforts to provide shelter in Cox’s Bazar to lakhs of displaced people who have fled Rakhine.

“Through this operation, we’ve supplied essential requirements by way of parboiled rice, dal, salt, sugar, cooking oil, tea, milk powder, mosquito nets and soap to about 300,000 displaced persons,” said the Indian minister.

The materials have been distributed to the intended recipients through the district administration in Cox’s Bazar.

Earlier, both the ministers reviewed the whole gamut of bilateral relations and the decisions taken so far.

Sushma Swaraj arrived here on Sunday on a two-day official visit to discuss bilateral issues aiming to take forward the ties to the next level.

Mahmood Ali received her at Bangabandhu Air Force base on her arrival at 1:41 pm.

Earlier, Indian Minister of Finance and Corporate Affairs Arun Jaitley paid a three-day official visit to Dhaka from October 3 at the invitation of Finance Minister AMA Muhith.

The two ministers reviewed the status of economic cooperation and development partnership initiatives taken during the visit of Prime Minster of India Narendra Modi to Bangladesh in June 2015 and Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina to India in April 2017.

India and Bangladesh have witnessed a deepening of bilateral economic cooperation in recent years, particularly in terms of increasing volumes of trade and investment flows, said the Indian High Commission in Dhaka.
SOURCE UNB NEWS
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/10/23/return-rohingyas-restore-normalcy-says-indian-fm/
 
12:00 AM, October 23, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:43 AM, October 23, 2017
No real progress yet
Efforts to solve Rohingya crisis fall short; UN pledging conference on aid today
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Rokiya, a Rohingya woman, holds her 10-month-old malnourished son, as a nurse checks him at the Action Against Hunger centre in Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox's Bazar yesterday.
Shakhawat Liton
Rohingyas have been telling the world numerous stories of horror, loss, murder, rape and villages burned to the ground over the last two months. The world's media have been flooded with their harrowing tales.
The atrocities being carried out by the Myanmar military since August 25 have been termed "a textbook example of ethnic cleansing" by the UN and "genocide" by different human rights bodies.

Yet, there has been no real progress in resolving the world's fastest growing humanitarian crisis.

As the global outcry fails to force Myanmar to end the atrocities, their flight continues, increasing the number of refugees in Bangladesh.

The crisis has been crying out for strong global action for a solution. But the actions remain inadequate.

In fact, the role of UN Security Council has been appalling. It was able to issue only a statement in mid-September, expressing concern over "excessive violence" by Myanmar security forces in Rakhine State, home to the majority of Rohingyas.

At the end of September, the UNSC discussed the crisis in an open meeting, but failed to take any decision due to China and Russia's opposition. That was all.


No further action was seen in the last three weeks while the atrocities continued unabated. UN Chief Antonio Guterres and other top UN officials' repeated calls for suspension of military action against the Rohingyas fell flat as UNSC did nothing.

Unless China and Russia--two permanent members of the UNSC with veto power--change their minds and refrain from supporting Myanmar, it is almost impossible for the council to do something to stop the exodus and pave the way fortheir voluntary return to their homeland.

Amid this situation, a ministerial-level conference on the crisis will be held in Geneva today to collect funds for humanitarian aid.

The conference, co-hosted by the European Union and the government of Kuwait, and co-organised by three UN agencies--UNHCR, IOM and OCHA, is being held to raise $434 million. But commitments so far have been made only of $116 million.

The UN agencies have plans to provide humanitarian aid till next February.

Humanitarian aid alone is not a solution to the crisis. It will help Rohingyas survive the next six months. What happens after February is still uncertain. But that Bangladesh will have to bear the brunt in the coming days is certain.

Everybody knows the root causes of this crisis are in Myanmar. But the lack of collective effort, particularly the failure of the UNSC to take decisive action, keeps allowing Myanmar to continue its ethnic cleansing before the eyes of world leaders, who have repeatedly promised in the past to take action on genocide.

After failing to stop genocides in Rwanda and Bosnia in the 1990s, the UN renewed its commitments and developed new mechanisms, including an office of the UN special advisor on prevention of genocides.

World leaders at the United Nations World Summit in 2005 agreed that the international community has a responsibility to use appropriate diplomatic, humanitarian and other means to protect populations from genocide and crimes against humanity.

The leaders also promised to be prepared to take collective action in accordance with the UN charter when a state manifestly fails to protect its population.

That the efforts bore no fruit was exposed by the UN and international communities' failure to protect Rohingyas. They are being treated by the Myanmar military in the same way as the Hutus treated the Tutsis like insects during the Rwanda genocide.

For their failure in Rwanda, Boutros Boutros-Ghali and Kofi Annan, both chiefs of the UN, and several world leaders apologised a few years after the genocide.

"The United Nations and its member states failed Rwanda and its people during the 100-day genocide and expressed 'deep remorse' that more wasn't done to stop it," Annan said in a statement in 1999.

On a 1998 state visit to Rwanda, former US president Bill Clinton apologised for inaction to prevent the genocide in 1994.

“It may seem strange to you here, especially the many of you who lost members of your family, but all over the world there were people like me sitting in offices, day after day after day, who did not fully appreciate the depth and speed with which you were being engulfed by this unimaginable terror,” Clinton said.

Annan's successor Ban Ki-moon in 2014 said, "The UN is still ashamed over its failure to prevent the 1994 genocide in Rwanda."

With the memories of Rwanda and Bosnia still there, the genocide should not have taken place in Myanmar. The world leaders should have taken prompt action to stop Myanmar military.

But the harrowing tales of Rohingyas show how the world leaders failed to deliver on their promises.

Will they apologise in future for their failure? It would seem like they prefer apologising or saying sorry over taking actions.
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/mayanmar-rohingya-refugee-crisis-no-real-progress-yet-1480279
 
National Verification Card (NVC): A Hidden Trap for Myanmar’s Rohingya
nvc.jpeg

Mohammed Ayub (TU), UAE
RB Article
October 22, 2017
Myanmar Military was never sincere in handling ethnics’ affairs, especially, in Rohingyas’ whose permanent home is northern Arakan.

Throughout the history, military uses the Muslims population of the country for political diversion and benefits.

After 9/11, 2001 attack in US, the perception of non-Muslims world towards the Muslims has changed in unbelievable way.
This opportunity, though hidden anti-Muslims campaign has long been rooted in Myanmar, was best used by the power monger groups like Myanmar Military to de-attach the Muslims from mass public, and divert the attention of all-problems-bundle of the country towards Muslims by exposing post 2001 sentiments of Islam.
As a result, majority Buddhists public of Myanmar, who has been caged more than five decades,turned away from the actual democratic movement of the country to join anti-Muslim movement and hence emerging a strong legal public anti-Muslim forces within Myanmar.

Publically motivated anti-Muslim operations have gained momentum after the alleged murder of Rakhine woman by Muslim in mid-2012. The campaign has got fierce intensity throughout the years as groups like MaBaTha, 969 has been publically propagating anti-Muslim hate speeches with the Military sponsorship.
ARSA’s attack on security posts of Arakan on 25th of august, 2017 met the Rohingyas with deadliest clearance operations that almost 600 thousands of Rohingya Muslims has poured into Bangladesh to escape historic brutalities of Myanmar Military and local Buddhists mobs.

Fortunately, Burmese Military has succeeded in filtering out Muslims from the anti-Military dictatorship forces with the injection of racially motivated propagandas to themajority xenophobic Buddhists public. The resultant achievement is both the Buddhist public, Military and government, have come under the same roof of de-rooting Rohingya Muslims from Arakan. Recent years have been the years of rigorous anti-Muslims campaign through different means; social media, mass public religious gatherings, that being a Muslim in Myanmar has become the greatest crime. And majority Buddhist perceives Muslims as a menace to their religion, race, culture and the country, so much so that they want Rohingya constitutionally disable if not completely eradicated from the soil of Arakan.

Actually, Rohingyas problem is based on well-founded fear created from the psychological disorder, dementia and xenophobe of Myanmar Buddhists. Logically speaking, the Myanmar have no problem with the word ‘Rohingya’ nor with the Muslim inhabitants that have long been residing in Arakan side by side.

The problem with them is the religion, which Rohingyas believe in.
Keep aside the volumes of history of pre-independent Burma; in post-independent Burma, there are mountains of historical evidences of Rohingya starting from the office of the then military war-fair to Myanmar’s Broadcasting Program, from Myanmar’s school, university textbooks to encyclopedia, from village chairman to MPs and Ministers.

Xenophobic Buddhists are blatantly denying the Rohingya just because of superstitious belief that, if Muslims were given equal rights, whole Burma will be Islamized, were made conceived in the hearts of Buddhists in the successive military regimes.

As said earlier, the Buddhists want Rohingya Muslims of Arakan to constitutionally disable by forcing them to accept National Verification Card (NVC) that in turn will make them foreigners.
From the legal perspective, NVC is not the product of any law or constitution of Myanmar, which is in force now. Even according to the clause 65 of notorious 1982 citizenship law, no NVC is required to issue citizenship card. It is a product of mere cowardice nationalist propagandists' imaginary islamophobic assumptions.

It is point-out-worthy that all the citizenship cards holder of Myanmar need not have to have NVC prior to citizenship cards. If the government of Myanmar sincerely wants to help solve the Rohingya crisis, there are many post-independent era’s records and evidences that it can depend on without imposing unconstitutional NVC card.
The Government’s ulterior motive behind this NVC is making believe the world that the Rohingyas are foreigners who are recent immigrants to Arakan from Bangladesh.

The following points are some of many historical evidences that Rohingyas are not British era settler and hence no required to go for NVC cards.

1. Rohingya holds the same citizenship NRC cards with 6 digits (where as foreigners hold FRC with 5 digits), which were issued after 1952-53 Mayu operations, as other ethnics of Myanmar and, were provoked in 1989 at the promise of issuing pink color citizenship cards.
Unfortunately, 1990-91 exodus took place and what Rohingyas in return were gifted was White cards in 1995.
If Myanmar sincerely wants to solve Rohingya crisis, it can base on those records and details collected in 1989. In 1993, NaSaKa aliases Border Immigrations Head Quarters (BIHQ) were deployed in Arakan with special decree and power solely aimed at Rohingyas.
And every year onwards were scrutiny and records of Rohingyas with group family photo but found none of illegal entry.

2. After Burma independence, all ethnics groups including Rohingyas took rebellion against Burmese government for autonomy. And the Rohingya Mujahids were the first to surrender to the central government for the sake of peace, tranquility and betterment of the sate and, were recognized as Rohingya indigenous ethnic as Rakhine.

3. In 1872, per square mile population of Arakan was 33 and that of Bengal was about 450. Even at that time, having unrestricted movement within British India, and greener pastures in British-Burma, dense-populatedly living Bengali had not seen flooding into British Arakan for good. Whoever, came was for seasonal work and went back after pocketful of money. And still Myanmar Buddhists say over populated Bangladesh pours Bengali to Arakan, a modern day killing field for Muslims.

4. On many occasions, Government imported Bengali Buddhists from Bangladesh with A to Z support. They could not survive in the golden Arakan having seen no future and returned Bangladesh. And still Myanmarsays Muslims are entering Myanmar while their fellow Bengali Buddhists did not survive because of zero opportunity and dead future.

5. No Muslim's "official family list" is left intact, except for dead or any other reasons, that member entry is stroked with red pen with remark that reads, " fled to Bangladesh". And still Myanmar accuses Rohingya of illegally coming in to Arakan.

6. In 2012, ex-president U Thein Sein and ex-immigration Minister U Khin Yee confessed in a VOA interview that there were no illegal Muslims residing in Arakan. And still Myanmar label Rohingya as "Khoewin" (ခိုးဝင္) meaning illegal immigrants.

7. And also under different rules of British, Arakan was under British-Burma, British-India and British-Bengal, where in all cases British censured the indigenous Muslim populations of Arakan as either Mahomadensor Mussulmans or Arakanese Mahomadens or Arakanese Mussulmans.

8. What Myanmar propagandist portrayed the Rohingya history is that there were no Muslim (Rohingya) inhabitants in the soil of Arakan before 1823 and they came into existence in Arakan only after British annexation when the Britishers brought many Muslimsfrom Bengal as laborers, ignoring piles of historical evidences as early as 1000 years before British conquest.

9. It was recorded in 1872 British-Burma census that there were 100,000 souls (of whom 30,000 were Muslims Rohingya) in Arakan when British annexed Arakan in 1826 and, many Muslims who escaped the brutal Burmese killings in 1784 returned to their original home Arakan when situation became peaceful in Arakan. And still there were uncertainty in Arakan and some Rohingyas who fled to Bangladesh in 1874 prefer to work as “seasonal laborers” in Arakan than settling back there in Arakan.
10. 1942 Muslim-Buddhist riot forced refuge the Buddhist populations of Northern to the southern part of Arakan and Muslim population of Southern into Northern part of Arakan and that is the reason why Muslims are densely populated in Northern Arakan.

From the above points one can comprehend and ponder that the Rohingyas are the core people of the soil of Arakan and requires no NVC process, as they have been under tight surveillance and scrutiny in the successive governments.
What Myanmar’s perception about Rohingya was that Myanmar is sandwiched between two overpopulated countries; Bangladesh and China, and it needs verification process in place to deter illegal entry from Bangladesh and China.
When China is concerned, Myanmar ignores even national sovereignty concerns, at the same time welcoming the Chinese with all its race, religion, culture and scarce resources. The Chinese from the eastern gate penetrated into Myanmar and gradually has absorbed and distorted Myanmar’s race, culture and resources and passed through the western gate (Arakan).

Astonishingly, whole Myanmar remains silent on the matter and unwise, foolish discriminatory agendas are put in practice against Rohingya Muslims.

Through out the Military regimes to date, no single illegal entry residing in Arakan can be brought forward by Myanmar to International surface, and contrary to that, the international bodies are witnessing Rohingyas fleeing due to the heinous crimes committed to them by the Military and local mobs.

Annan Commission left dubious state regarding citizenship status of Rohingya in his final report enforcing NVC process even to be allowed with uncles’ or aunts’ documents when one’s own documents are not available. On the other hand, the report also emphasizes to amendment of the 1982 citizenship law. So, no clear cut strategy was advised in the report for the citizenship of Rohingya, whose the same was stripped off by the enforcement of 1982 citizenship law after 1978 refugees take-back.

In the most years of tyrant rule of Military, Rohingya Muslims were suffered from all aspects of life and also Arakan has never been a safe place for Rohingya Muslims, which 1784, 1978,1991 and 2017 exoduses testified. Rohingyas are dying to live in Arakan because it is their ancestral land.

Economically, Bangladesh is in relatively better position than Myanmar and it is a nasty ideology to accuse of Rohingyas of recent immigrants from Bangladesh and enforcing them for NVCs.
In conclusion, It would be wise choice for Myanmar to restrain using the word “Bengali” when referring Muslim minority Rohingya and, to stop enforcing NVC cards to Rohingyas.
And last but not the least, all Rohingyas should be called back with assurance of recognition, safety, security, and many other civil rights.
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/10/national-verification-card-nvc-hidden.html
 
OFID supports UNHCR relief operations in Bangladesh
20.10.2017
EA_NewsWebBangladesh.jpg

Photo: UNHCR
Vienna, Austria, October 20, 2017. The OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID) has approved an emergency assistance grant to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to help fund ongoing humanitarian operations in Bangladesh, where an estimated 20,000 Rohingyas per day are seeking refuge after outbreaks of violence in Rakhine State in Myanmar.

These outbreaks have triggered one of the most massive and swiftest refugee crises in the world today, with nearly one half million people fleeing to safety, primarily in Cox’s Bazar District in Bangladesh. There, they have joined 33,000 Rohingyas registered as refugees in the camps in Kutupalong and Nayapar, as well as over 274,000 others, mainly in so-called makeshift camps.

A large number of the refugees comprise women and children, many of whom have become separated from their families. UNHCR has declared this a refugee crisis and has launched an appeal, coordinating and working closely with the government of Bangladesh and agency partners to help meet refugees’ most basic needs, including supplementary feeding program, shelter, water, sanitation and healthcare, as well as camp and site preparation and management, among other activities.

OFID’s US$400,000 grant will help fund the top priorities as identified by the UNHCR; especially those concerning food security and nutrition; safe water supplies and sanitation facilities, as well as medical care and preventive health measures. Cooperation between OFID and UNHCR dates back to 1984. Since then, 13 grants have been extended in support of UNHCR’s relief operations in Asia and Africa.
http://www.ofid.org/NewsEvents/ArticleId/3393/OFID-supports-UNHCR-relief-operations-in-Bangladesh
 
Bangladesh says Rohingya arrivals ‘untenable’, seeks ‘durable solution’
‘Biggest exodus since the Rwandan genocide in 1994’
Reuters | Published: 17:57, Oct 23,2017
Nearly one million Rohingya refugees have fled violence in Myanmar, an ‘untenable situation’ for neighbour Bangladesh, the country’s UN envoy said on Monday, calling on Myanmar to let them return.

Some 600,000 people have crossed the border since August 25, when insurgent attacks on security posts were met by a ferocious counter-offensive by the Myanmar army in Rakhine state which the United Nations has called ethnic cleansing.

‘This is the biggest exodus from a single country since the Rwandan genocide in 1994,’ Shameem Ahsan, Bangladesh’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, told a UN pledging conference.

‘Despite claims to the contrary, violence in Rakhine state has not stopped. Thousands still enter on a daily basis,’ he said.

Bangladesh’s interior minister was in Yangon on Monday for talks to find a ‘durable solution’, Ahsan said.

But Myanmar continued to issue ‘propaganda projecting Rohingyas as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh’, Ahsan said, adding: ‘This blatant denial of the ethnic identity of Rohingyas remains a stumbling bloc’.

Myanmar considers the Rohingya to be stateless, despite tracing their families’ presence in the country for generations.

The United Nations has appealed for $434 million to provide life-saving aid to 1.2 million people for six months.

‘We need more money to keep pace with intensifying needs. This is not an isolated crisis, it is the latest round in a decades-long cycle of persecution, violence and displacement,’ U.N. humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock told the talks.

‘Children, women and men fleeing Myanmar are streaming into Bangladesh traumatised and destitute,’ he added.

‘We assess we have pledges of around $340 million,’ Lowcock said before the mid-day break in the meeting.

New pledges included 30 million euros announced by the European Union, $15 million by Kuwait, 10 million Australian dollars by Australia and 12 million pounds from Britain.

He reiterated the UN call on Myanmar to allow ‘full humanitarian access across Rakhine’ where aid agencies have been denied entry.

Myanmar must ‘guarantee the right to safe, voluntary and dignified return so that the Rohingya can live in peace with their human rights upheld in Rakhine’, Lowcock said.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/267...gya-arrivals-untenable-seeks-durable-solution
 
Reuters Exclusive: Returning Rohingya may lose land, crops under Myanmar plans
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Rohingya refugees, who crossed the border from Myanmar two days before, walk after they received permission from the Bangladeshi army to continue on to the refugee camps, in Palang Khali, near Cox's Bazar,
Bangladesh October 19, 2017.
REUTERS/Jorge Silva
By Simon Lewis, Thu Thu Aung, Kyaw Soe Oo
Reuters
October 22, 2017
SITTWE, Myanmar -- Rohingya Muslims who return to Myanmar after fleeing to Bangladesh are unlikely to be able to reclaim their land, and may find their crops have been harvested and sold by the government, according to officials and plans seen by Reuters.

Nearly 600,000 Rohingya have crossed the border since Aug. 25, when coordinated Rohingya insurgent attacks on security posts sparked a ferocious counter offensive by the Myanmar army.

The United Nations says killings, arson and rape carried out by troops and ethnic Rakhine Buddhist mobs since late August amount to a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya.
Civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who has no control over the military, has pledged that anyone sheltering in Bangladesh who can prove they were Myanmar residents can return.

Reuters has interviewed six Myanmar officials involved with repatriation and resettlement plans. While the plans are not yet finalised, their comments reflect the government’s thinking on how Suu Kyi’s repatriation pledge will be implemented.

Jamil Ahmed, who spoke to Reuters at a refugee camp in Bangladesh, is one of many Rohingya who hope to go back.

Describing how he fled his home in northern Rakhine state in late August, Ahmed said one of the few things he grabbed was a stack of papers - land contracts and receipts - that might prove ownership of the fields and crops he was leaving behind.

“I didn’t carry any ornaments or jewels,” said the 35-year-old. “I’ve only got these documents. In Myanmar, you need to present documents to prove everything.”

The stack of papers, browning and torn at the edges, may not be enough, however, to regain the land in Kyauk Pan Du village, where he grew potatoes, chilli plants, almonds and rice.

“It depends on them. There is no land ownership for those who don’t have citizenship,” said Kyaw Lwin, agriculture minister in Rakhine state, when asked in an interview whether refugees who returned to Myanmar could reclaim land and crops.

Despite his land holdings, Myanmar does not recognize Ahmed as a citizen. Nearly all the more than 1 million Rohingya who lived in Myanmar before the recent exodus are stateless, despite many tracing their families in the country for generations.

Officials have made plans to harvest, and possibly sell, thousands of acres of crops left behind by the fleeing Rohingya, according to state government documents reviewed by Reuters.

Myanmar also intends to settle most refugees who return to Rakhine state in new “model villages”, rather than on the land they previously occupied, an approach criticized in the past by the United Nations as effectively creating permanent camps.

The government has not asked for help from any international agencies, who are calling for any repatriation to be voluntary and to the refugees’ place of origin.
“OWNERLESS” CROPS
The exodus of 589,000 Rohingya - and about 30,000 non-Muslims - from the conflict zone in northern Rakhine has left some 71,500 acres of planted rice paddy abandoned and in need of harvesting by January, according to plans drawn up by state officials.

Tables in the documents, reviewed by Reuters, divide the land into paddy sown by “national races” - meaning Myanmar citizens - or “Bengalis,” a term widely used in Myanmar to refer to the Rohingya, but which they reject as implying they are illegal migrants from Bangladesh.

Kyaw Lwin, the state minister, confirmed the plans, and said there was a total of 45,000 acres of “ownerless Bengali land”.

Two dozen combine harvesters operated by officials from the agriculture ministry will begin cutting stalks this month in areas under military control.

The machines will be able to harvest about 14,400 acres according to official calculations contained in the plans. It is unclear what will become of the remaining crop, but officials told Reuters they would try to harvest all the paddy, recruiting additional labor to harvest manually if necessary.
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Rohingya refugees who fled from Myanmar wait to be let through by Bangladeshi border guards after crossing the border in Palang Khali, Bangladesh October 16, 2017. REUTERS/ Zohra Bensemra
An acre of paddy in Myanmar typically makes more than $300 at market, meaning the state will gain millions of dollars worth of rice.

The harvested rice will be transported to government stores, where it would either be donated to those displaced by the conflict or sold, Rakhine state secretary Tin Maung Swe told Reuters by phone.
“The land was abandoned. There is no one to reap that, so the government ordered to harvest it,” he said.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) deputy Asia director Phil Robertson, said the government should at least guarantee that the rice would be used for humanitarian support and not for profit.
“You can’t call a rice crop ‘ownerless’ just because you used violence and arson to drive the owners out of the country,” he said.
‘MODEL VILLAGES’
Many refugees are fearful to return and are skeptical of Myanmar’s guarantees. Those who do decide to cross back into Myanmar will first be received at one of two centers, according to government plans reviewed by Reuters, before mostly being relocated to model villages.

International donors, who have fed and cared for more than 120,000 mostly Rohingya “internally displaced persons” (IDPs) in supposedly temporary camps in Rakhine since violence in 2012, have told Myanmar that they will not support more camps, according to aid workers and diplomats.
“The establishment of new temporary camps or camp-like settlements carries many risks, including that the returnees and IDPs could end up being confined to these camps for a long time,” said U.N. spokesman Stanislav Saling in an emailed response.

Satellite imagery shows 288 villages, mostly Rohingya settlements, have been fully or partially razed by fires since Aug. 25, according to HRW.

Refugees say the army and Buddhist mobs were responsible for most of the arson. The government says Rohingya militants and even residents themselves burned the homes for propaganda.

The hamlets where Rohingya farmers lived were “not systematic”, and so should be rebuilt in smaller settlements of 1,000 households set out in straight rows to enable development, said Soe Aung, permanent secretary at the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement.

“In some villages there are three houses here, four houses over there. For example, there’s no road for fire engines when fire burns the villages,” Soe Aung said.
IDENTITY CHECKS
Those who decide to cross back into Myanmar will first be received at one of two centers, according to government plans reviewed by Reuters.

At the centers, officials said, the returnees will fill out a 16-point form that will be cross-checked with local authorities’ records. Immigration officials have for years visited Rohingya households at least annually for checks, photographing family members.

For refugees who lost all their documents, the government would compare their photos to those that immigration authorities have on file, said Myint Kyaing, the permanent secretary at the Ministry of Labour, Immigration and Population.

Officials will accept as evidence “national verification” cards handed out in an ongoing government effort to register Rohingya that falls short of offering them citizenship. The card has been widely rejected by Rohingya community leaders, who say they treat life-long residents like new immigrants.
“We are not going to go back like this,” said Mushtaq Ahmed, 57, a farmer from Myin Hlut village now living in the Tenkhali refugee camp in Bangladesh, where Jamil Ahmed is also staying.

“If I can go back to my house, and get my land back, only then I will go. We invested all our money into those paddy fields. They are killing so many of us with swords and bullets, and killing the rest of us like this.”
Additional reporting by Zeba Siddiqui in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh and Shoon Naing and Antoni Slodkowski in Yangon; Editing by Alex Richardson
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/10/reuters-exclusive-returning-rohingya.html
 
Jordan’s Queen Rania denounces ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya
UNB
Published at 02:32 PM October 23, 2017
Last updated at 08:43 PM October 23, 2017
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Jordan's Queen Rania meets with Rohingya refugees during her visit to Kutupalong refugee camp in Ukhia on October 23, 2017 AFP
The queen also condemned the torture on the Rohingya people in Myanmar
Jordanian Queen Rania Al Abdullah on Monday called on the international community to respond “effectively, quickly, and generously” to alleviate the suffering of the Rohingya, decrying global inaction in the face of “what many are acknowledging now as an ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya Muslims.”

“With no respect or regard for the principles of humanitarian and international law, the discrimination against and the persecution of the Rohingya minority has continued unabated, in full view of the world,” she said.

Queen Rania made the remarks to the press during a visit to the Kutupalong Refugee Camp and its surrounding in Cox’s Bazar district.

She reached Cox’s Bazar directly in the morning to see the Rohingya situation on the ground. State Minister for Foreign Affairs M Shahriar Alam received her. State Minister of Women and Children Affairs Meher Afroze Chumki was also present.
The Queen spoke of the “shocking escalation of violence against the Muslim Rohingya minority in Myanmar,” which has caused over 600,000 Muslim Rohingya to flee from Myanmar’s Rakhine State since August.

“One has to ask, why is the plight of this Muslim minority group being ignored? Why has this systematic persecution been allowed to play out for so long?” she added.

In her capacity as a board member of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and as an advocate of the work of UN humanitarian agencies, she toured the Kutupalong Refugee Camp, meeting with several Rohingya women and children, who recently crossed into Bangladesh from Rakhine State in Myanmar.

Describing their stories of “unimaginable acts of violence,” Queen Rania mentioned’ accounts of Rohingya children orphaned, women brutalised, family members butchered, and villages burned.

“Before coming here, I had braced myself to witness some desperate conditions, but the stories I heard today were heartbreaking and harrowing,” she said.

She has heard of systematic rape of young girls, who were trapped in schools and raped by soldiers. “I’ve heard of babies being kicked around like footballs and stomped on. I’ve heard family members telling me how they’ve seen their own parents killed, right before their eyes.”

“This is something that is unacceptable,” Queen Rania said.
The Queen said it is unforgivable that this crisis is unfolding on the world stage to a largely indifferent audience. “The world seems to be silent to what many are acknowledging now as an ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya Muslims.”

Queen Rania visited emergency services offered by humanitarian agencies at the camp, stopping at a UNHCR-run healthcare center as well as a school that has been converted into a shelter to host hundreds of new arrivals, including unaccompanied children.

She then proceeded to the surrounding makeshift settlements, which were recently haphazardly set up to provide additional shelter to incoming refugees.

The Queen, who is also the United Nations Children’s Fund’s (Unicef) first Eminent Advocate for Children, stopped by a child learning center run by the agency, as well as a primary healthcare center run by the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

Queen Rania stated that 95% of Muslim Rohingya do not have access to safe water and more than three quarters lack food.

Queen Rania’s visit to Bangladesh coincides with a high level pledging conference taking place in Geneva on Monday, aiming to mobilise international resources for the Rohingya Crisis Response Plan.

The plan, which calls for $434 million to help 1.2 million people through February 2018, is currently only 26% funded.

“This visit helps draw attention to the incredible generosity of the government and people of Bangladesh, and helps maintain support to the fastest-growing refugee emergency today,” said Louise Aubin, UNHCR’s Senior Emergency Coordinator in Cox’s Bazar.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/foreign-affairs/2017/10/23/223345/

12:00 AM, October 24, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:55 AM, October 24, 2017
Act quickly, effectively
Jordan's queen urges int'l community over Rohingya crisis
jordan_queen.jpg

Queen Rania of Jordan shakes hands with Rohingya children during her visit to the Kutupalong refugee camp in Ukhia yesterday. She went to Cox's Bazar to see the refugee situation there. Photo: AFP
Unb, Dhaka
Jordanian Queen Rania Al Abdullah yesterday called upon the international community to respond "effectively, quickly, and generously" to alleviate the suffering of Rohingyas.

She said it was unforgivable that the crisis was unfolding on the world stage to a largely indifferent audience.

“The world seems to be silent to what many are acknowledging now as an ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya Muslims,” she told journalists during a visit to the Kutupalong refugee camp and its nearby areas in Cox's Bazar.

“With no respect or regard for the principles of humanitarian and international law, the discrimination against and the persecution of the Rohingya minority has continued unabated, in full view of the world,” the Queen said.

She reached Cox's Bazar in the morning to see the Rohingya situation on the ground. State Minister for Foreign Affairs M Shahriar Alam received her. State Minister of Women and Children Affairs Meher Afroze Chumki was also present.

The Jordanian queen spoke of the shocking escalation of violence against the Rohingyas in Myanmar.

“One has to ask, why is the plight of this Muslim minority group being ignored? Why has this systematic persecution been allowed to play out for so long?”

In her capacity as a board member of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and as an advocate of the work of UN humanitarian agencies, she toured the Kutupalong refugee camp. She met several Rohingya women and children, who recently crossed into Bangladesh from Myanmar's Rakhine.

Describing their stories, Queen Rania mentioned Rohingyas' accounts of children orphaned, women brutalized, family members butchered, and villages burned.

“Before coming here, I had braced myself to witness some desperate conditions, but the stories I heard today [yesterday] were heartbreaking and harrowing,” she said.

She heard of systematic rape of young girls, who were trapped in schools and raped by soldiers. “I've heard of babies being kicked around like footballs and stomped on. I've heard family members telling me how they've seen their parents killed, right before their eyes.”

“This is something that is unacceptable,” Queen Rania said.

She visited emergency services offered by humanitarian agencies at the camp, stopping at a UNHCR-run healthcare centre as well as at a school that has been turned into a shelter to host hundreds of new arrivals, including unaccompanied children.

She then proceeded towards the surrounding makeshift settlements, which were recently set up to provide shelter to incoming refugees.

The Queen, also the first Eminent Advocate for Children of the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef), stopped by a child learning centre run by the agency, as well as a primary healthcare centre run by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

She stated that 95 percent of Rohingyas did not have access to safe water and more than three-quarters of them lacked food.

Queen Rania's visit to Bangladesh coincides with a high level pledging conference taking place in Geneva on Monday, aiming to mobilise international resources for the Rohingya Crisis Response Plan.

The plan, which calls for $434 million to help 1.2 million people through February 2018, is currently only 26 percent funded.

“This visit helps draw attention to the incredible generosity of the government and people of Bangladesh, and helps maintain support to the fastest-growing refugee emergency today,” said Louise Aubin, UNHCR's senior emergency coordinator in Cox's Bazar.
http://www.thedailystar.net/backpage/act-quickly-effectively-1480861
 

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