Bangladesh, Myanmar form working group for Rohingyas' repatriation

International |  IANS  | Published :

Dhaka Bangladesh and Myanmar on Tuesday formed a joint working group and signed an agreement detailing the terms of its mandate to begin repatriation of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees who escaped a military offensive in Rakhine state.

Bangladesh's Foreign Ministry representative Mohamed Shahidul Haque and his counterpart from Myanmar, U Myint Thu, inked the agreement to create the joint working group, which will comprise 15 representatives from each country, Efe news reported.

"In the arrangement Bangladesh and Myanmar signed in Myanmar's capital Nay Pyi Taw in November there was a mention of a Joint Working Group. Now it has been formed, we will start working on the next phase," Bangladesh's Foreign Minister A.H. Mahmud Ali said.

"I cannot say exactly when it will start, but it will start soon. It's important to start. I am really satisfied," Ali said.

Myanmar signed an agreement with Bangladesh on November 23 to repatriate the more than 650,000 Rohingyas who had crossed over to Bangladesh fleeing the violence that erupted on August 25 in Myanmar's Rakhine state after the Army launched an offensive following a series of attacks on government posts in the region by Rohingya rebels.

According to the agreement, the repatriation process would start within two months of the signing of the agreement.

Myanmar, which does not recognise the Rohingyas -- a Muslim minority community -- as citizens, had agreed to their return provided they have the required documents and are not involved in alleged acts of terrorism.

The Bangladeshi Foreign Ministry said that the accord will "include mechanism of verification, time schedule, transport and logistics arrangements, reception procedures, communication etc. to commence the repatriation process within the stipulated time frame".

The working group will be assisted by international bodies such as the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and other international partners in various stages of repatriation.

Several human rights organisations, however, have repeatedly denounced that conditions are not appropriate for the safe return of the Rohingyas to Myanmar, where, according to recently-arrived refugees, the offensive against them is still underway.

The UN and several human rights organisations had condemned alleged abuses against the Rohingyas as part of the offensive and called it "ethnic cleansing".

The non-profit Médecins Sans Frontiéres (Doctors Without Borders) reported in a study last week that at least 6,700 Rohingyas, including 730 children aged below five, had been killed in Myanmar in the first month of the crisis.








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