No willing hosts for Rohingyas
(Photo - Mashiur Rahaman/The Express Tribune) |
Khalid Iqbal
The Nation (Pakistan)
February 4, 2013
February 4, 2013
The United Nations considers Rohingyas of Myanmar as a persecuted
religious and linguistic minority. Myanmar considers this community, of
about 800,000, settled in Rakhine, as illegal immigrants from
Bangladesh.
Despite their continuous residential reality, Myanmar is reluctant to
grant them their due citizenship rights. Last year, a statement by
Burmese President Thein Sein that “all Rohingyas should either be
deported or placed in refugee camps” sparked a mass exodus.
Needless to say, Buddhist Rakhine and Muslim Rohingya communities have
co-existed for generations. They are now being forcibly segregated.
Barriers have been erected across the roads in the state capital and the
homes of thousands of Rakhine people have been destroyed. The divide
between Buddhists and ethnic Muslims echoes of similar happenings in the
Balkans.
Myanmar’s quasi-civilian government has failed to intervene and prevent
the hardships being perpetrated upon the hapless Rohingya minority. It
is also ironic that the iconic lady from Myanmar, Aung San Suu Kyi, who
herself faced brutality and was awarded a Nobel prize for her services
to humanity, has not been able to come forward and play a meaningful
role to resolve this humanitarian crisis.
The leadership in Myanmar has imposed emergency rule in response to the
continued tensions in Rakhine state. However, the application of
preventive rules is selective; while the Buddhists remain free to move
around, Rohingyas’ movement is being incrementally restricted.
To avoid persecution in Burma, a large number of Rohingya Muslims have
fled to Bangladesh, Thailand and Malaysia, where they are treated as
stateless migrants. More and more Rohingyas are now risking their lives
by attempting to migrate on boats.
If apprehended, they are deported back to Myanmar after a short trial.
Hundreds of them have been arrested at the Dhaka International Airport
in recent months. “Such attempts are on the rise. These Rohingyas are
mostly caught at the immigration when their fake passports go under the
scanner,” said Hasanul Haider, Commanding Officer of Airport Armed
Police.
Myanmar has rejected an offer by the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (Asean) to begin negotiations for bringing communal violence to
an end. According to Asean’s Secretary General Surin Pitsuwan: “Myanmar
believes it is their internal matter. But your internal matter could be
ours the next day, if you are not careful.” He proposed the setting up
of tripartite talks between Asean, the UN and Myanmar’s government to
prevent the violence from having a broader regional impact.
Unfortunately, the bloodshed has led to about 180 deaths since June
2012. This year, the fighting in Rakhine has resulted in another 88
killings. Human rights organisations fear that the actual number of
deaths could be much higher. Unbridled violence has also manifested the
in torching of thousands of homes, resulting in thousands of Rohingya
Muslims ending up in overcrowded shanty camps, where they live under
sub-human conditions.
Al Jazeera’s Wayne Hay reported from Sittwe, capital of Rakhine state,
that: “Around 100,000 people have been displaced since the fighting
started back in June. Most of those displaced lost their homes when they
were burned down in what they say is a deliberate attempt by the
predominantly Buddhist government to drive them out of the country.
According to Mohammad Juhar, a Rohingya Muslim, ‘there were security
forces present before the latest violence started. But when the fighting
came to our town, there was no security…....When they did arrive, it
was too late and they also shot into the crowds of Muslims’.“
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has requested
Myanmar’s neighbouring countries to open their borders for those who are
fleeing the country. It maintains that there are about 25,000 Rohingyas
registered in Malaysia. Many Rohingya Muslims escaping the communal
violence have also sought refuge in Bangladesh and Thailand. It the fact
that it is a dangerous journey and after all going through that
trouble, most of them are turned back.
According to the Bangladesh Coast Guard, at least 350 would-be refugees
have, reportedly, drowned in the sea since July 2012. This figure,
however, reflects only those incidents that the survivors or their
families have talked about. Then again, the actual number could be much
higher.
Rejected as citizens by both Bangladesh and Myammar, they continue to be
victimised in the camps where they seek shelter. Jonah Fisher of BBC
reports: “Deliveries to the camps on Myebon have to be made by boat, and
attempts to get proper sanitation and supplies into Taung Paw have so
far been blocked. Rakhine Buddhists control the jetty and are refusing
to allow aid agencies’ regular access to the Rohingya camp.” Hence,
obstruction by the Buddhist community was preventing aid workers from
doing 90 percent of their work. Only the Burmese military could force
the aid through, but it has refused to intervene.
The Rohingyas, who have crossed over to Bangladesh and are residing in
Madham Charpara, are not registered as refugees. Since 1992, the
Bangladeshi government has denied permission to the UNHCR to register
them. They are still considered illegal migrants and are not entitled to
food, healthcare or education benefits provided by the UNHCR and its
partner organisations.
According to a survey conducted by “Doctors without Borders”, 40 percent
of the deaths in unregistered camps are caused by diarrhoea. There is
only one toilet for every 10 families. “The unhygienic life these
refugees are leading here is the main cause of their illnesses,” said
Professor Pran Gopal Datta, Vice Chancellor of Bangabandhu Medical
University.
Bill Frelick, Director of Human Rights Watch’s Refugee Programme in
Bangladesh, also said: “This is sheer inhuman treatment.” He added that
unregistered refugees cannot get healthcare facilities outside their
camps, and the aid agencies with better medical treatments are not
allowed to reach them either. The Bangladeshi government has ordered at
least three international aid organisations to cease assistance to the
refugees living outside registered UNHCR camps. “This is a cruel
policy,” he remarked.
Nevertheless, the ethnically Bengali, Rohingyas seek refuge in
Bangladesh, which now has an estimated population of them quarter of a
million. Bangladesh, however, does not appreciate their presence despite
their ethnic ties to the country and has been striving to make life as
difficult as possible for them in the hope that they will leave.
The Thai government has decided to temporarily detain Rohingya migrants
for six months, without upgrading their status as refugees. The National
Security Council (NSC) Secretary General, Lt Gen Paradon
Pattanathaboot, said that Thailand will not set up permanent refugee
camps, though it could still build temporary detention centres. Bangkok
promised to receive Rohingyas for a maximum of six months, but warned
that it would deport those who try to escape. More than 1,400 Rohingyas
have been rounded up since early January.
Thailand has provided them with food and water on humanitarian grounds.
The NSC is of the view that after the six month period, the UNHCR should
take care of them. Bangkok Post has reported that on January 31,
Thailand stopped the entry of boats carrying 340 Rohingyas, and
officials ordered migrants to continue their travel to Malaysia after
delivering them food and water.
The question is: whether these arrests, humiliations and deportations
could stop the Rohingyas from emigrating into the neighbouring
countries? As long as the Myanmar government continues to treat them as
aliens, the problem would persist. All countries have a moral obligation
to accept refugees, who are in danger and help them to resettle.
The UN needs to take bold steps to resolve the issue in a wholesome way,
beyond its refugee dimension. It needs to act with speed and will as it
did in the case of East Timor.
The writer is a retired air commodore and former assistant chief
of air staff of the Pakistan Air Force. At present, he is a member of
the visiting faculty at the PAF Air War College, Naval War College and
Quaid-i-Azam University. Email:khalid3408@gmail.com
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