Banner Advertiser

Friday, June 19, 2009

[ALOCHONA] The Rohingya issue



How long are we going to pretend that we are not ignoring the conditions of the Burmese refugees? Not a single government has done anything in the past, and from the comments of our dear Foreign Minister (see the last line), it appears that she is betting on impossibility and stating the obvious. Duh!! How about you ask for international intervention in Burma, Madam Foreign Minister, and try to engage Burma diplomatically? Or are you too weak-kneed to even send an emissary? It is in our strategic interest to negotiate with Burma, or should I send you a book or two on territorial and military strategy? Sheikh Hasina sure can pick her ministers!
 
But the bigger question here is that do we, as a nation, open our doors to refugees who have been abused, attacked, murdered and mutilated by the Burmese military junta? Do we have a moral responsibility here? In an interesting way, we kind of share the same history as the Rohingyas. Not too long ago, many of our countrymen and women were forced to live in refugee camps in India. Should we not extend the same generosity to the Burmese refugees?
 
It is unlikely that the Burmese govt. is going to change its ways anytime soon, unless there is an outside intervention or internal revolt. Until that happens, we can and should stand out as a beacon of hope for those who have lost everything. Plenty of international organizations can help us create better living conditions for the Rohingyas.
 
Which also brings me to my second issue re. the Pakistani refugees. It's been 30 something years, and Pakistan is not going to repatriate them. If these refugees decide to stay back in Bangladesh, integrate into our ways of life, and become productive members of our society, it is our humane responsibility that we allow them to do so. Most of their children and grandchildren have known nothing but Bangladesh, and growing up in slums and ghettos, they have only been exposed to the ugliness of our society. It's time that we, as a nation, come together, and welcome those who have no where to go.
 
Just my two cents on a Friday morning.
 
Cyrus
 
 
Bangladesh refugees in 'misery'

Thousands of unregistered Rohingya refugees from Burma live a life of "outrageous misery" in makeshift camps in Bangladesh, an aid agency says.

 

In a report released to co-incide with World Refugee Day on Saturday, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) says that these Rohingyas are "routinely abused". MSF says that they have nowhere to live and are suffering "dire conditions".

 

The government has not responded to the report. But it says it can only help refugees who are officially recognised.

It says that Rohingyas who do not live in camps run jointly with the UN's High Commission for Refugees are not welcome in the country and should return to Burma immediately.

 

Thousands of Rohingyas - who are mostly Muslim - first arrived in south-east Bangladesh about 20 years ago to escape what they said was persecution carried out by the country's military government.

 

Many have remained, despite concerted efforts by Dhaka and Rangoon to repatriate them.

 

In January the Thai government was accused of mistreating hundreds of Rohingyas who were trying to flee Burma by sea.

 

'Nowhere to go'

MSF - the only foreign agency that works with refugees in the Kutupalong makeshift camp - says that it is "deeply concerned" over the plight of an estimated 25,000 people who recently have flocked to there from Burma "hoping for recognition and assistance".

 

"But instead of finding help, they have been told that they cannot live next to the official camp, supported by the Bangladeshi Government and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees," an MSF report says.

 

"Nor can they legally live on adjacent forestry department land. They have nowhere to go and no way to meet their basic needs."

MSF says that inhabitants of unofficial camps - including women and children - are routinely beaten up. It says a countless number of their homes have been destroyed.

 

Between 14 to 20,000 Rohingyas live in official camps, the government says.

The aid agency says that it was alerted to the plight of the refugees in unofficial camps in March, when numbers began to rise.

An assessment was conducted and at least 20,000 people were discovered to be living in "dire humanitarian conditions, with global acute malnutrition rates above the emergency threshold".

 

The Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Bangladesh Foreign Minister Dipu Moni said earlier this month that Burma was to blame for the recent influx of refugees.

 

"If there is no qualitative change in the place they come from, the influx will be continuing no matter how seriously we try to resolve the crisis," she said.




__._,_.___


[Disclaimer: ALOCHONA Management is not liable for information contained in this message. The author takes full responsibility.]
To unsubscribe/subscribe, send request to alochona-owner@egroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___