Rohingyas are one of world's most persecuted and neglected people |
Unwanted
in Myanmar and unwelcome in neighboring Bangladesh,
Rohingya Muslims are literally ‘God’s forsaken’ people.
For
decades, they have remained ‘one of world’s most persecuted people’, according
to the United Nations, due to years of persecution in Arakan (Rakhine) state in
Myanmar, yet their suffering looks set to increase further in the near future
with recent hostile moves in Myanmar and Bangladesh.
Recent media reports say Myanmar’s quasi-civilian government has
reaffirmed a discriminatory two-child policy to
control the Rohingya population.
This has sparked outrage from various quarters including the US government, Human Rights Watch and Myanmar’s pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi.
The
move coincides with the Bangladesh
Foreign Ministry’s drafting of a strategic plan to tackle undocumented Rohingya
refugees that it says are living in the country illegally.
The
plan, currently being reviewed by several government bodies, contains 25
proposals including conducting a survey to determine the exact number of
Rohingya refugees, forming a taskforce to stop Rohingyas entering the country
illegally, and installing an embankment as a barrier along 50km of the Naf
River that separates Bangladesh and
Myanmar.
Most
importantly, for the first time it proposes a special law that will make it a
punishable offense to provide shelter and support to "illegal Rohingyas."
The
plan needs to be cleared by an inter-ministerial cabinet body, which will not
take long. Once in place the government intends to establish detention centers
along the border and repatriate illegal Rohingyas back to Myanmar.
“The
government is getting strict on Rohingyas because they have tainted the
country’s image internationally with their illegal activities. Moreover, the
government thinks the international community is not doing enough to press
Myanmar on the Rohingya crisis,” said a Foreign Ministry official who did not
want to be named.
In the
past four decades, thousands of Rohingyas have fled a series of bloody
crackdowns and sectarian violence in Rakhine and entered neighboring Bangladesh. Most were eventually repatriated, but 30,000 have refused to
leave, for fear of further persecution.
In
1993, the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) granted official refugee status
to these Rohingyas, which allowed them to stay in two camps in the Cox’s Bazar
district, where they depend on government and NGO aid for survival.
The
UNHCR, however, estimates there are about 300,000 undocumented Rohingyas,
residing outside the official camps; Bangladesh
authorities put the number at around 500,000.
Bangladesh has been relatively friendly in the past. Rohingyas look very
similar to native Bengali people physically and their language is related to a
Bangla dialect spoken in southeastern Bangladesh.
Many
have found a home in Bangladesh by
utilizing their physical and linguistic similarities. They have married
locally, found jobs and run businesses, albeit illegally.
In
recent years the local media has reported many unlawful activities allegedly
committed by undocumented Rohingyas. These include Rohingyas being arrested in
Middle Eastern countries with fake Bangladeshi passports, damaging the
environment by forest encroachment, and involvement with militant groups and
drug smuggling.
These
allegations and revelations which many say taint the country’s image have led
to closer and more critical government monitoring of the Rohingya issue.
The
government denied entry to thousands of Rohingyas fleeing bouts of deadly
sectarian violence in Myanmar in June and October last year. The decision was
criticized by the UNHCR, various Western governments and international rights
groups.
In
August last year, the Bangladesh
government banned three international NGOs – Doctors without Borders, Action
against Hunger and Muslim Aid UK – from operating among the Rohingyas.
Rosaline
Costa, a rights activist and lawyer, says they deserve shelter and support in Bangladesh on humanitarian grounds, but sympathy has been lost because
some vested groups have "misused" Rohingyas for their own interests.
“I
worked with the UNHCR for eight years … and found that Rohingyas were being
abused by several organizations. Rohingyas were also sent abroad illegally,
they were recruited by extremist outfits and coerced into illegal activities
like robberies, drug-smuggling and the sex trade,” said Costa, coordinator of
Hotline Human Rights Bangladesh,
adding the government has yet to develop a workable mechanism to deal
effectively with the refugee problem.
Professor
CR Abrar from Dhaka University’s International Relations department says a
solution to the problem has been elusive because no one has ever tackled it
properly.
“Bangladesh, Myanmar and the international community have failed to find a
solution, because the issue was never part of long-term development plans for
this region. What Bangladesh and
Myanmar are doing now won’t be effective in the long run because they fail to
tackle the root causes and lack efficient policies to redress it,” Professor
Abrar said.
The
plight of the Rohingya is rooted in history. For hundreds of years they had a
happy and peaceful existence which was snatched from them in recent times.
Without effective and efficient attention and concerted efforts from all
parties involved to address underlying historic, social, economic and political
issues that affect their hopes for a better future will remain elusive. Hasty and
imprudent efforts won’t improve anything, but will only make things worse.
The Third Eye is a commentator based in Dhaka, Bangladesh
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