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Rohingya Arakanese Muslims. The 
Rohingyas have been an international refugee issue at Myanmar-Bangladesh
 border since 1978. The Muslims coming from outside in the medieval 
period began settling in Arakan constituting today the second largest 
religious group, next only to the Buddhist Maghs. The Muslims in the 
region may be divided into five distinct communities, namely Roayingya, 
Jamboyika, Kamanchi, Zerbadi and Dinnet. The Roayingyas are today 
generally known as Rohingyas. Opinions vary as to the ethnic origin of 
the Rohingyas. An assumption goes that they are the progeny of persons 
migrating from the Chittagong region and marrying Arakanese women. 
A serious communal riot took place in 1942 when as 
high as one lakh Rohingyas were reported to have been killed. During 
World War II the Rohingyas formed a Mujahid force with the help of arms 
left behind by the retreating Japanese, but they did not succeed much 
against the Maghs. During U Nu regime, the Burma Territorial Force (BTF)
 composed of almost 90 percent Maghs, let loose a reign of terror on the
 Rohingyas accusing them of having questionable nationality. The 
resistance put up by the Rohingyas against the repression persuaded the 
Burmese government to grant them some rights and recognise their 
nationality. In the 1940s and especially after the independence of Burma
 in 1948, brewing tensions between the Arakanese Buddhist Maghs and the 
Muslim Rohingyas resulted in the exodus of a large number of Rohingyas 
to Chittagong. 
The Rohingyas once again faced repression and mass 
eviction in 1962. General Ne Win overthrew the Prime Minister U Nu and 
declared Burma a socialist state to be ruled by the Burma Socialist 
Programme Party composed of the army officers. Arakan was made a 
Buddhist-ruled federal state. General Ne Win’s sectarian policy made the
 conflict between the Buddhist Maghs and Muslim ethnic groups including 
the Rohingyas even more acute. His racial discrimination and strong 
Burmese chauvinist policy to suppress ethnic movements created for 
Bangladesh a serious human crisis. Several lakhs of Rohingyas took 
refuge in Bangladesh. General Ne Win launched in 1978 the Nagamin Dragon
 Operation to suppress the ethnic uprising. Thousands of Rohingyas were 
killed indiscriminately for their allegiance to the Arakan National 
Liberation Party. Bangladesh was not in a postion to provide them with 
food and shelter. The Bangladesh government sought intervention of the 
international community for a speedy resolution of the crisis. Pressures
 from UN and other international forums persuaded the Ne Win government 
to agree to take back the refugees. According to the agreement between 
the two countries, most of the Rohingya refugees were repatriated 
between 6 October and 24 December in 1979. However 15,000 refugees were 
left behind in Bangladesh. 
Ne Win promulgated in 1982 a new nationality law 
under which all Rohingyas, who had entered the country after 1983, were 
declared as floating nationals without a right to acquire property, 
political privileges and the right of free movement in the country. This
 set in motion a regime of serious repression on the Rohingyas afresh. 
Ne Win’s policy of repression once again created a huge influx of 
Rohingya refugees into Bangladesh. 
In the general elections held in May 1990, candidates
 of the National League for Democracy led by Aung San Suu Kyi won 392 of
 the 485 seats in Myanmar parliament. The Rohingya Muslims of Arakan 
supported Suu Kyi’s candidates and they won all the 23 seats of Arakan. 
Instead of transferring power to Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s new military ruler 
General Sau Maung nullified the election results and interned Suu Kyi. 
General Sau Maung’s army let loose a reign of terror in Arakan against 
the Rohingyas. By 26 June 1991, as many as 250,877 Rohingyas were driven
 from Arakan into Bangladesh. They took shelter in Cox’s Bazar area of 
the Chittagong region. This again drew international attention making 
way for bilateral negotiations. The governments of Myanmar and 
Bangladesh signed an agreement on 28 April 1992 under which the former 
was to repatriate all the refugees within 6 months beginning on 6 May 
1992. About 22,000 refugees were reported waiting at Kutupalong and 
Nayapara camps in Cox’s Bazar district for repatriation. 
The Myanmar government recognised 7,000 of the 22,000
 refugees as their citizens. About 5,000 of them however refused to be 
repatriated apprehending repression on their return. In fact, the 
repatriation remained suspended for 16 months following violent clashes 
in 1997 between the anti-repatriation groups and the Bangladesh police. 
Repatriation resumed on 25 November 1998; the Myanmar authorities have 
been sending a list of 50 cleared refugees per month and a repatriation 
commission jointly set up by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and 
the Bangladesh government for action then scrutinises the list. At the 
beginning 28 national and international non-government organisations 
(NGOs) were involved in providing emergency food, water, shelter, 
sanitation and medical assistance to the Rohingya refugees. After the 
repatriation began some of the camps were closed down and 14 of the NGOs
 terminated their programmes by 1995. 
It is generally believed that the internal political 
crisis in Myanmar has given rise to the Rohingya crisis again and again.
 Except the Rohingya issue there is practically no other political 
problem between the two countries. It is recognised that an early 
resolution of this vexing problem is essential to end the deteriorating 
law and order situation, environmental degradation, smuggling, public 
discontent on the border. 
[KM Mohiuddin] 
 Credit : 
http://www.banglapedia.org/httpdocs/HT/R_0217.HTM 
  
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