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Number of Rohingyas in Bangladesh surpasses Bhutan’s population

| Updated: April 03, 2018 11:14:28


Number of Rohingyas in Bangladesh surpasses Bhutan’s population

Currently Bangladesh has a Rohingya population which is far more than the Bhutan's entire population, said Director of Centre for Genocide Studies at Dhaka University, Professor Imtiaz Ahmed on Monday.

He said it while presenting a keynote address at the first session of a two-day international conference titled "Rohingya Refugee Crisis: Towards Sustainable Solutions" at Dhaka University.

Centre for Genocide Studies of Dhaka University, Brac University and ActionAid jointly organised the conference aiming to prevent further violence against Rohingyas and promote sustainable peace and reconciliation for those affected.

Professor Imtiaz said Bhutan has around 800,000 people whereas Bangladesh had to give refuge to some 1.2 million Rohingyas.

Talking about the complexity and magnanimity of the Rohingya crisis, the academic pointed out that the issue is no longer a bilateral matter between Myanmar and Bangladesh.

Rather it is simultaneously national, regional and international issue, he said, as per a UNB report.

"It took Bhutan thousands of years to become Bhutan and this is one 'Bhutan' in Bangladesh which has emerged in three months' time", said the professor adding that this dimension needs to be kept in mind.

He pointed out four dates as critical. "On 23 August, 2017, the Advisory Commission on the Rakhine State (also known as the Kofi Annan Commission) submitted its final report to the Myanmar national authorities. On 24 August, the media, at home and abroad, published the report in detail. On 25 August, the so-called Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) attacked the Myanmar military forces. The very next day, on 26 August, the Myanmar military resorted to what came to be referred to as 'a textbook case of ethnic cleansing, which in next three months saw more than 750,000 Rohingya people mostly women and children, flee Myanmar to take refuge in Bangladesh."

"It is an issue of being human, how to ensure justice to a population in a dire situation, a population who have lost everything, even to dream and live a life with dignity," said Imtiaz Ahmed.

Executive Director of the Centre for Peace and Justice at BRAC University, Chair of ActionAid Bangladesh and Co-convener of the conference Manzoor Alam gave the welcome speech.

Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque, UNDP Country Director Sudipto Mukerjee, and ActionAid Country Director Farah Kabir also spoke.

Later, a message from Robert Keith Rae, special envoy of Canada for Myanmar, was read out at the inaugural session.

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