Myanmar fails to ensure safe Rohingya return: HRW


FE ONLINE REPORT | Published: August 24, 2020 12:37:27 | Updated: August 24, 2020 15:41:18


Rohingya refugee children fly improvised kites at the Kutupalong refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, December 10, 2017 — Reuters/Files

Myanmar has failed to ensure that nearly one million Rohingya refugees can safely return home three years since fleeing the Myanmar military’s crimes against humanity and possible genocide, the Human Rights Watch has said.

Rohingya refugees since taking shelter in Bangladesh have faced tightened restrictions on rights to information, movement, access to education, and health, and have been unlawfully killed by Bangladeshi security forces, it added in a statement on Monday.

On August 25, 2017, the Myanmar military began a brutal campaign of ethnic cleansing against Rohingya Muslims involving mass killing, rape, and arson that forced over 740,000 to flee, mostly to neighboring Bangladesh, which was already hosting an estimated 300,000 to 500,000 Rohingya refugees who had fled persecution dating back to the 1990s and after.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in January 2020 imposed provisional measures on Myanmar to prevent genocide while it adjudicates alleged violations of the Genocide Convention.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) in November 2019 began an investigation into Myanmar’s forced deportation of Rohingyas and related crimes against humanity.

Myanmar has not complied with these international justice measures, has not permitted the United Nations to investigate grave crimes inside the country, nor conducted credible criminal investigations of its own into military atrocities, it read.

“Myanmar’s government should recognize that the terrible suffering it has caused the Rohingya won’t disappear even amid a global pandemic,” said Brad Adams, Asia director.

“Myanmar needs to accept an international solution that provides for the safe, voluntary return of Rohingya refugees, while an understandably stretched Bangladesh should not make conditions inhospitable for refugees who have nowhere to go,” he added.

The 600,000 Rohingyas remaining in Myanmar’s Rakhine State face severe repression and violence, with no freedom of movement or other basic rights. Desperate Rohingyas who fled Myanmar face severe risks seeking refuge throughout the region.

Myanmar has failed to address the root causes of widespread abuses against the Rohingyas and has refused to create the necessary conditions for their safe, dignified, and voluntary return.

nsrafsanju@gmail.com

Share if you like