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The Financial Express

UN envoy calls on international community to keep Rohingyas high on agenda

| Updated: August 26, 2022 08:49:54


File photo (Collected) File photo (Collected)

UN Secretary General’s special envoy on Myanmar Noeleen Heyzer has told the international community to keep the Rohingya and the affected host communities high on the international agenda. 

“The generosity of Bangladesh and host communities towards Rohingya refugees in a time of need conveys the critical urgency of greater international and regional commitment to burden share and to ensure that the finger do not become forgotten,” she told a seminar organised by the Centre for Genocide Studies of the University of Dhaka on Thursday. 

She also urged the global and regional leaders to support Bangladesh and to leverage their influence with Myanmar to create conducive conditions for the voluntary safe and dignified return of refugees.  

She made it clear that it is ultimately Myanmar's responsibility to establish conducive conditions for the voluntary, safe, and dignified assistance return to Myanmar for all refugees. 

“The rights and security of the Rohingya people must be guaranteed and embedded in a mammal that solutions towards a peaceful, democratic and inclusive future guided by the recommendation of the Advisory Commission on the Rakhine State,” she said. 

Expressing frustration about the situation in Rakhine she said, “No progress made on addressing the root causes of the problem including lack of citizenship, land ownership, and freedom of movement.” 

“But to create conditions for conducive return, we need to look at sustainable solutions and think out of the box. And this includes working with member states, regionally and internationally to address root causes of Rohingya vulnerabilities” she added. 

She also suggested making the Rohingyas an integral part of discussions regarding repatriation so that their needs and concerns are heard, respected, and integrated. 

“My message today is that we all must do more to give the Rohingya people greater hope and not allow the sense of being forgotten and abandoned, to take their right to live in dignity as human beings must be supported and safeguard by all of us, including the international community,” she said. 

Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen said, “Myanmar’s successive governments carried out a well planned, well-coordinated campaign to drive out the from the ancestral homes in the Rakhine State.” 

He noted that not a single Rohingya could return to their homeland due to the non-committal attitude of Myanmar towards the obligation mentioned in the bilateral instrument signed after the beginning of the crisis. 

He said the Rohingya crisis was created by Myanmar and its solution also lies with Myanmar, he said adding that the Rohingya issue is not only Bangladesh's responsibility to take care of them, but it is also the global responsibility. 

Japanese Ambassador Ito Naoki said that Japan is planning to start skill development training for the Rohingyas. 

He also mentioned the Japanese plan to host some Rohingyas under a third-country initiative. 

Professor Imtiaz Ahmed made the key presentation in the seminar chaired by foreign secretary Masud Bin Momen 

Meanwhile, in a joint statement issued on Thursday, 13 European countries and the USA foreign missions in Dhaka said that the international community stands resolute in solidarity in its support for Rohingya and Bangladesh, and will continue to pursue a long-term solution to the crisis and its causes. 

“Today, five years on, we reflect on the horrific events of August and September 2017 that forced around 800,000 Rohingya to flee from their homes in Myanmar to seek refuge in Bangladesh,” the statement said. 

The countries acknowledge the incredible resilience and courage of the Rohingya in the face of their displacement.  

They vowed to continue to raise the plight of Rohingya on the international stage and seek a solution to the crisis that allows for the voluntary, safe, dignified, and sustainable return of Rohingya to their communities in Rakhine State, Myanmar, as soon as conditions allow.  

“We note with concern the reports of escalating violence and serious human rights violations across Myanmar by the Myanmar military,” they said urging Myanmar to end of the culture of impunity in Myanmar and reiterate our commitment to international accountability initiatives for the terrible acts committed against Rohingya.  

“Our countries have imposed sanctions on some individuals responsible for serious human rights violations against Rohingya. We will also continue to push for a solution to the political and humanitarian crisis in Myanmar caused by the military coup of February 2021, a solution which must be inclusive of Rohingya” they said.  


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