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3000 ROHINGAS UNDER CHINESE PROTECTION.

Banglar Bir

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চীনের আশ্রয়ে ৩ হাজার রোহিঙ্গা
অনলাইন ডেস্ক২২ নভেম্বর, ২০১৬ ইং ১৪:৪৪ মিঃ
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মিয়ানমারের রাখাইন প্রদেশের স্থানীয় ও সেনাবাহিনীর অত্যাচারে পালিয়ে বেড়ানো রোহিঙ্গাদের মধ্যে ৩ হাজার জন আশ্রয় পেয়েছে চীনে। দেশটির গণমাধ্যমে সরকারের বরাত দিয়ে বলা হয়েছে, মিয়ানমারের কিছু নাগরিককে চীনের মিয়ানমার সীমান্তাঞ্চলে আশ্রয় দেয়া হয়েছে।

রোহিঙ্গাদের মূল আবাসস্থল থেকে চীনের সীমান্ত সবচাইতে দূরে। কিন্তু জীবন বাঁচানোর তাগিদে ছুটতে থাকা এই মানুষগুলো বাংলাদেশ ও ভারত সীমান্ত ব্যবহার করে চীনে যাচ্ছে। চীনের সরকারের পক্ষ থেকে আরো জানানো হয়, তিন হাজার মিয়ানমারের নাগরিককে আশ্রয় দিয়েছি আমরা, যাদের মধ্যে অনেকেই ছিল আহত। তাদের হাসপাতালে নেয়া হয়েছে। চিকিৎসা সেবা প্রদান করা হচ্ছে।

চীন সরকারের বরাত দিয়ে ফার্স্ট পোস্ট জানায়, মানবিক দিক বিবেচনা করে রোহিঙ্গাদের যতটুকু সম্ভব সহায়তা দেয়া চেষ্টা করছে চীন।

এদিকে রোহিঙ্গাদের আশ্রয় দেয়ার পাশাপাশি মিয়ানমার সীমান্তে নিরাপত্তা জোরদার করেছে চীন। তারা জানায়, চীন সীমান্তাঞ্চলে মিয়ানমারের গতিবিধির ওপর নজর রেখে নিরাপত্তা ব্যবস্থা বাড়াচ্ছে তারা।

এদিকে বাংলাদেশ ঢালাওভাবে সীমান্ত না খুললেও আশ্রয় দিচ্ছে রোহিঙ্গাদের। ফার্স্ট পোস্ট জানায়, কমপক্ষে ৮৬ জনকে হত্যা ও ৩০ হাজার মানুষকে উচ্ছেদ করেছে মিয়ানমার সরকার। তাদের অনেকেই জীবন বাঁচানোর তাগিদে বাংলাদেশে প্রবেশ করে। এ ক্ষেত্রে আহত বেশ কিছু রোহিঙ্গাকে বাংলাদেশ আশ্রয় দিয়েছে বলে জানায় তারা। ফার্স্ট পোস্ট ও সাউথ চায়না মর্নিং পোস্ট।

ইত্তেফাক/আরএ
 
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Bangladeshis are generally delusional bunch from top to bottom. It reflects by the attitude of their media to general people. No real idea whatever going around the globe. The sheltered ethnic Chinese people are living world apart from the Rohingyas.
 
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In China’s hinterlands, a new life for Myanmar’s Rohingya



President of Myanmar Thein Sein. Photo: Wikemedia Commons

On February 12, 2015 Myanmar President Thein Sein, prompted by protests led by Buddhist monks in Yangon, reversed a decision made ten days earlier to give voting rights to the country’s Rohingya population. The reversal, while surprising to some, was only the latest in a series of events to befall the Muslim minority who call western Myanmar’s Rakhine state home.

The Rohingya of Myanmar (also known as Burma) have lost more than voting rights in the past. Regarded as one of the world’s most oppressed peoples, the Rohingya are a distinct ethnic group that speak a dialect of Bengali and are thought to be descended from Arab and Persian traders.

Persecuted at Home

Under the military junta that ruled Myanmar for most of the latter half of the 20th century and the current, nominally civilian government, Myanmar’s Rohingya have suffered chronic poverty, food insecurity, harassment and forced labor, among other human rights abuses. Following Burma’s 1982 Citizenship Law, hundreds of thousands of Rohingya were denied citizenship and are still referred to as ‘aliens’ and ‘foreigners’ by government officials. They are neither allowed to travel outside their hometown nor marry without official approval.

Poor relations between the Muslim Rohingya and their neighbors have only made things worse. Tensions between Rakhine state’s Muslim population and the majority Rakhine ethnicity, who are Buddhist, boiled over in 2012, leading to anti-Muslim riots that spread throughout the country. In Rakhine state alone, over 200 people were killed and whole villages were burned to the ground. Conditions have not improved for Myanmar’s Rohingya population since then. The current boat crisis of thousands of Bengali and Rohingya refugees stranded off the coasts of Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia is a consequence of awful conditions at home.

The Rohingya, however are certainly not the only group struggling in Myanmar. Despite what appears to be a nascent democracy, a civil war between the government and an array of armed ethnic groups along the country’s periphery has flickered continuously since the 1950s. The reasons for the conflicts are many, though issues of ethnic autonomy and control of precious resources like jade and timber loom large.

The conflict’s latest iteration began in February 2015 and is still ongoing. A flare up of tensions between the Myanmar Army and Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) in Kokang, Shan State, has killed hundreds and forced tens of thousands of civilians to flee across the border into China.

Many Rohingya have also left Burma in the past decades. Tens of thousands of them reside in ill-equipped refugee camps on the Myanmar-Bangladesh border, though others have escaped to new lives abroad. Their final destinations vary, but the majority resides in Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Thailand and Pakistan. Of these Rohingya living overseas, who may number over one million, most work low-wage jobs in the construction and service industries. There are some, however, that have chosen a different path in a land closer to home.


Abdullah’s storefront in Jinghong

Eight hundred kilometers east of Rakhine state in Jinghong, China, Abedullah owns a small jewelry shop. It’s three o’clock in the afternoon he hasn’t sold a thing.

Abedullah, like almost one million of his compatriots in Rakhine state, is a Rohingya, but he has not lived there in thirteen years. Instead, he’s settled in Jinghong, the capital of Yunnan Province’s Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, along with almost 600 other Rohingya. All of them sell jade.

According to Abedullah, who only agreed to give his first name, Rohingya merchants first came to Jinghong almost forty years ago. Following the end of the bloody Bangladesh Independence War in 1973, hundreds of thousands of refugees fled into neighboring Burma. Marginalized by the Burmese and eventually disavowed by the Bangladeshi government, tens of thousands of Rohingya fled overseas. A handful made it to southwest China’s Yunnan province.

Stories of Jinghong’s first Rohingya are hard to find and by all accounts, the number of émigrés remained small until the 1990s. It was then that the Chinese economy began to truly open up to the international market. As trade increased and more Chinese became wealthy, the country’s jewelry consumption level grew as well, skyrocketing over 4000% in a decade.

While all gemstones have grown in popularity in recent decades, none hold the place in Chinese culture that jade does. Regarded as a stone of mystical qualities since antiquity, jade is the king of gemstones in China and it is in Myanmar that the world’s highest quality jade is found.

As a result, jade shops are ubiquitous in dozens of towns along the China-Myanmar border. Jinghong is one of the largest. Straddling the Mekong River, this once sleepy town has grown into a city of six hundred-thousand and now hosts millions of tourists each year. Many of these tourists come looking to buy Burmese jade. As travelers have flocked to Jinghong in greater numbers in recent years, Rohingya merchants with connections to the Burmese jade trade have followed to keep up with demand.

A New Life

One of the recent arrivals is Xiao Fei, a 21 year-old who prefers his new Chinese nickname to his given name. Xiao Fei, like many other Rohingya in Jinghong, came at the behest of his family; his grandfather first arrived in the city almost thirty years ago. After saving enough money for a passport, Xiao Fei was able to leave his home in Yangon and help his grandfather set up the family’s second shop.

Xiao Fei had to save up for his passport because getting such a document is often impossible for many Rohingya in Myanmar. Since they are officially considered to be foreigners by the Burmese government, Rohingya can only obtain passports after paying expensive bribes to the right people. That is why, as Xiao Fei explains, “Only rich Rohingya can make it to China.”

Once in Jinghong, new arrivals find an environment altogether strange and inviting. The forest of newly-built apartment complexes and hotels certainly dwarfs anything found in Rakhine state, however the hundreds of established Rohingya businessmen form a tight community that provides everything from religious services to a lunchtime delivery service of halal Burmese cuisine.

It is the mosque that is the heart of the community, says Waynai, a trader living in Jinghong for six years. The Jinghong Mosque, located not far from the banks of the Mekong was first established decades ago by the city’s existing community of Hui, a distinct ethnic group of more than ten million people that practice Islam and speak Mandarin Chinese.

When the Rohingya began to move to Jinghong in greater numbers in the late 1990s, they became a part of the congregation, eventually joined by a small population of Uighurs from China’s northwest. Together, these three groups of Muslims manage the congregation. Despite disparate geographic and cultural backgrounds, the mosque is thriving with a healthy number of members, daily prayers held in Arabic and discussion groups where participants speak in Standard Mandarin.


The Jinghong Mosque

However both Waynai and Abedullah agree more with the mosque’s Uighur members on theological questions. When asked whether or not he had any non-Rohingya friends from the congregation, Abedullah answers, “Yes, but not the Hui. They’re fake … they don’t have Allah in their hearts.” Instead, it is the Uighur community that he feels closer too. “[The Rohingya] are similar to the Uighurs because neither of us are free … we both have to struggle to survive.”

This struggle is why Ba Hlaing, a 31 year-old jade dealer, came to Jinghong eight years ago. At the time, his family lived comfortably in a suburb of Yangon but as he came of age, conditions for young Rohingya grew more difficult. “I would’ve liked to stay with my family, but there wasn’t anything to do, no money to make.”

“It’s because of [the government] that we’re so backwards now,” he says in a whirlwind of English, Mandarin and Jinghong dialect, slapping the table after each word.

Just then a Han Chinese couple enters Ba Hlaing’s shop. He greets them using his best Mandarin, standing, “Welcome to Ba Hlaing’s Jewelry! We have the finest jade from Myanmar! Would you like to look at a bracelet?”

After five minutes of browsing, the wife still has not decided on a piece and the husband, fidgeting, suggests heading back to their hotel. The couple leaves and Ba Hlaing sits down to light a cigarette. “That’s how it goes,” he sighs. Just like Abedullah, business is slow for Ba Hlaing, even during tourism’s high season.

Ba Hlaing believes the drop in jade sales is a consequence of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s much-publicized crackdown on corruption. Once-popular ostentatious displays of wealth, like jade pieces worth tens of thousands of dollars are now frowned upon and officials that might frequent jade shops like Ba Hlaing’s are staying away.


Burmese jadeite. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

The jade, however, keeps flowing from Myanmar. Most of it is mined in a strip of remote jungle in Kachin State, in the country’s northeast. Conditions in Myanmar’s jade mines are notoriously dangerous and the towns that spring up around them are known as much for their drugs and guns as they are for their jade. However bad mining conditions are though, the money can be worth it for those who can make it. Official figures from Myanmar’s government put jade exports at $1.4 billion between 2011 and 2014. Analysts from Harvard University’s Ash Center disagree, estimating jade sales – both official and off the books – at $8 billion for 2011 alone.

Once the raw jade has been extracted, it is sent to processing centers. The majority are located within Myanmar, in urban centers like Mandalay and Yangon, where the jade is polished and crafted into a final product. The next step is to get it into China, where the market is.

Most traders interviewed for this article admitted that the majority of the jade they sold was actually smuggled into Yunnan. A few well-placed bribes on both sides of the border can get shipments of jade, transported in trucks, into China reliably. Once the jade is in Yunnan, it usually makes its way to Ruili, a major border crossing between China and Myanmar.

According to Ba Hlaing, many Rohingya traders in Jinghong have a contact in Ruili, usually family, that buys the jade. Others, however, are directly connected to processing centers, most often in Yangon. For more valuable pieces, with sale prices upwards of $50,000, many traders will use air transport to ensure their safe arrival. While import taxes must be paid in these cases, the extra cost is often worth the peace of mind.

A Tough Decision

Peace of mind, however, is getting harder to come by. With a slowdown in business and mounting issues back in Myanmar, many members of Jinghong’s Rohingya community are facing a tough decision whether or not to return home.

Ba Hlaing, for one, is planning on going back to Myanmar. Sales have decreased for the past two years and he fears that a protracted crackdown on corruption in China will keep jade sales low and prevent his shop in Jinghong from making a profit.

Despite the dire situation for the Rohingya in Myanmar, Ba Hlaing is choosing to remain positive. “I think things will get better for us,” he says guardedly. “We have [this year’s parliamentary] election and the world paying attention to us so democracy is a good thing.”

Abedullah, on the other hand, does not share Ba Hlaing’s optimism. He does not want to return to Myanmar and sees little hope for democracy delivering the Rohingya from oppression.

“Things are a mess in Myanmar right now, everything is a mess,” he says. “The economy is bad and the government and [the armed ethnic groups] are still fighting.”

When asked his thoughts on the country’s armed conflicts, Abedullah pauses before exhaling heavily. “You know, we want to go to war too. At least [the armed ethnic groups] have guns. We don’t have anything,” he laments. “The government even took the knives from our houses … But then they still call us terrorists.”
 
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Oh look another thread on the rohingyas.

Maybe rename this shit into - Rohingya Defence Forum.
 
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China is a very tolerant society like what we have in South Asia.
 
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Rohingya are drug peddling extremists...in Bangladesh they took part in the destruction of Buddhist temples in Ramu and that's without me even going into the yabba trade.

China and the world can have the Rohingya.

Say no to the Rohingya...keep Bangladesh for Bangladeshis.
 
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আমরা না পারলেও পেরেছে চীন

260345_1.jpg
22 Nov, 2016

http://www.facebd.net/newsdetail/detail/31/260345

আরাকান তথা রাখাইন রাজ্যের রোহিঙ্গাদের ওপর মিয়ানমারের রাষ্ট্রীয় বাহিনী নির্মম অত্যাচার চালাচ্ছে। জ্বালিয়ে দিচ্ছে তাদের বাড়ি-ঘর। ধর্ষণ করা হচ্ছে নারীদের। রোহিঙ্গাদের নির্মূল করতে সৈন্যদের সাথে যোগ দিয়েছে রাখাইন সম্প্রদায়ের লোকজনও।

জাতিসংঘের তথ্যমতে, ১২শ’র বেশি রোহিঙ্গার ঘর-বাড়ি পুড়িয়ে দেওয়া হয়েছে। প্রাণভয়ে তারা বাংলাদেশে আশ্রয় নিতে এলেও আমরা তাদের আশ্রয় দিইনি। বরং প্রায় প্রতিদিনই শোনা যায়, রোহিঙ্গাদের পুশব্যাক করে মিয়ানমারে পাঠানো হচ্ছে।

জনসংখ্যাধিক্যের চাপ সামলানোর ঝুঁকির কারণেই হয়তো আমাদের সরকার নতুন করে রোহিঙ্গাদের বাংলাদেশে প্রবেশে বাধা দিচ্ছে। কিংবা থাকতে পারে অন্যকোনো কারণও। কেননা, মিয়ানমার থেকে পালিয়ে আসা ৫ লক্ষের বেশি রোহিঙ্গা ইতোমধ্যে বাংলাদেশে আশ্রয় পেয়েছে। তাদের চাপ সামলাতেই সরকার ব্যতিব্যস্ত।

মিয়ানমারের বাংলাদেশ সীমান্তে যেমন রোহিঙ্গারা দেশ ছেড়ে পালাতে চাইছে। তেমনি চীন সীমান্তেও চলছে অস্থিরতা। সেখান থেকেও মানুষজন জীবন বাঁচাতে দিকবিদিক ছুটছে। তারা চীন সীমান্তে গিয়ে আশ্রয় খুঁজছে। আর মানবিক কারণে চীন তাদের সীমান্ত খুলে দিয়ে আশ্রয়প্রার্থীদের গ্রহণও করছে।

জানা গেছে, ২০ নভেম্বর রোববার থেকে মিয়ানমারের উত্তরাঞ্চলের চীন সীমান্তে তাং ন্যাশনাল লিবারেশন আর্মি, কাচিন ইনডিপেন্ডেন্স আর্মি ও মিয়ানমার ন্যাশনাল ডেমোক্রেটিক এলায়েন্স আর্মি নামে তিনটি বিদ্রোহী গ্রুপের সঙ্গে সেনাবাহিনীর লড়াই চলছে।

মিয়ানমারের উত্তর সীমান্তবর্তী মুসে এবং কুটকাই শহরের কাছে পুলিশ ও সামরিক বাহিনীর ফাঁড়ির ওপর অতর্কিত আক্রমণ চালায় এ তিনটি জাতিগত বিদ্রোহী গ্রুপ। পরে সেনাবাহিনীর সঙ্গে বন্দুকযুদ্ধে ৮ জন নিহত হয়।

লড়াই থেকে বাঁচতে ওই অঞ্চলের অসংখ্য বাসিন্দা এলাকা ত্যাগ করে চীনের দিকে যাচ্ছেন।

মানবিক কারণে চীনও সীমান্ত পেরিয়ে চলে যাওয়া এসব লোকদের গ্রহণ করেছে। চীনের হাসপাতালগুলোতে পালিয়ে যাওয়া ব্যক্তিদের মধ্যে অসুস্থ ও আহতদের চিকিৎসাও দেয়া হচ্ছে।

চীন যা পারছে তা হয়তো আমাদের পক্ষে সম্ভব নয়। তাছাড়া, আমাদের সরকারের পলিসিও আমরা পুরোপুরি জানি না। আর আমরা আমাদের সরকারের ইচ্ছের বিরুদ্ধেও কিছু বলতে চাই না।

তবে, এই প্রার্থনা করি যে, মহান আল্লাহ আমাদের রাষ্ট্রকে সেই সামর্থ্য দিন যাতে বর্বর মিয়ানমার বাহিনীর দ্বারা আক্রান্ত রোহিঙ্গা ভাই-বোনদের প্রতি আমরাও যেন সহায়তার হাত বাড়াতে পারি।

উৎসঃ bangladeshism

Tuhin Malik
3 hrs ·
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"রাখাইন রাজ্যে সেনাবাহিনী ও পুলিশ অভিযানের নামে মুসলিম রোহিঙ্গাদের বাড়িঘর আগুনে পুড়িয়ে দিচ্ছে। অবিবাহিত মেয়েদের ধরে ধর্ষণ করছে। পুরুষ ও যুবকদের ধরে নিয়ে নির্যাতন চালাচ্ছে। এর মধ্যে তাঁর স্বামী বশির উল্লাহকেও রোববার রাতে ধরে নিয়ে গেছে। তিনি বেঁচে আছেন কি না জানা নেই। তাই দুই মেয়েকে নিয়ে শাহপরীর দ্বীপে পালিয়ে আসেন।"
মায়ানমার থেকে দুই মেয়েকে নিয়ে শাহপরী দ্বীপে পালিয়ে আসা গৃহবধূ দিলদার বেগম।

রোহিঙ্গারা জানান,
"বাংলাদেশে অনুপ্রবেশের জন্য নাফ নদীতে শত শত রোহিঙ্গা অবস্থান করছে। রোহিঙ্গাদের উল্লেখযোগ্য একটি অংশ ধারালো অস্ত্রের আঘাতে ক্ষতবিক্ষত। প্রচণ্ড শীতে নৌকায় নারী ও শিশুরা কাতরাচ্ছে। তাদের খাবারও নেই। গত সোমবার নাফ নদীতে একটি নৌকাডুবির ঘটনায় ১০ জন রোহিঙ্গা নিখোঁজ। এর মধ্যে একজনের লাশ পাওয়া গেছে বলে শোনা গেছে।"

"তাঁদের গ্রামে হামলার সময় সেনা, পুলিশ ও রাখাইনরা বেপরোয়া গুলিবর্ষণ ও ঘরবাড়িতে অগ্নিসংযোগ করছে।ইতিমধ্যে মংডুতে ১৫ হাজারের মতো রোহিঙ্গাকে ভিটাছাড়া করা হয়েছে।"

সূত্র: প্রথম আলো
http://m.prothom-alo.com/…/1…/নাফ-নদীতে-ভাসছে-শত-শত-রোহিঙ্গা




বাঁশেরকেল্লা - Basherkella
16 hrs ·
মিয়ানমারে নির্বিচারে গন হত্যারের প্রতিবাদে সুপ্রীম কোট আইনজীবী সমিতির সংবাদ সম্মেলন । SCBA অডিটোরিয়ামে অনুষ্ঠিত এই সম্মেলনে বারের সভাপতি এডভোকেট ইউসুফ হোসেন হুমায়ুন সেক্রেটারী ব্যরিস্টার ব্যারিস্টার মাহবুব উদ্দিন খোকনসহ আইনজীবিরা এতে অংশ গ্রহণ করে । আগামী কাল সমাবেশের ঘোষণা ।




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12:00 AM, November 23, 2016 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:07 AM, November 23, 2016
On protecting refugees from Myanmar


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Rohingya refugees fleeing Burma and Bangladeshi economic migrants were found in overcrowded boats in May.

Shamsul Bari

Speaking at the UN General Assembly in September 2016, our Prime Minister spoke of the need to protect the rights of refugees and migrants globally and urged that the world must reach a consensus on shared responsibility and inclusiveness to address the crisis.

As a retiree from UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, her words were music to my ears. My 23 years of service with UNHCR gave me the opportunity to deal with the plight of refugees in every continent of the world. It is no exaggeration to say that whenever we received positive support from governments on refugee protection, we danced with joy.

UNHCR served as the focal point for all UN assistance to Bangalee refugees in India during our Liberation War. Some of my colleagues in the organisation told me how proud they felt to have helped the birth of our nation. I often told them that having been born through the world's largest refugee crisis, I had perhaps a better understanding of refugee situations than most of them.

I have always felt that, among all the nations of the world, we would perhaps be most protective of refugees because of our history. In fact, going beyond our recent experience of being refugees ourselves, we have had a long tradition of giving shelter to refugees from all over India and beyond. The prevalence of Sufi Islam in Bangladesh is a testimony to the generous asylum given by our rulers to refugees from Iran in those days. The composite nature of our population speaks of our long tradition of hospitality.

In more recent years, we have also given shelter to many hapless refugees from our neighbouring country, Myanmar. They have come and gone back in large numbers in the last four decades. In more recent years, as the socio-political situation in their places of origin in Myanmar deteriorated, more refugees have tried to enter our country.

But alas, our hospitality appears to be drying up. In the last two years, our border guards have pushed back so many of these refugees that many of them, trying to go to more distant shores, have perished at sea. We are doing so even today. Reports in our news media in the last few days tell us how much our border officials are once again engaged in turning back many harried asylum seekers from Myanmar.

I know how refugees feel when they are not allowed to enter or disembark in the country of their arrival. My experience between 1978 to early 1990s, with the movement of over two million Vietnamese boat-people in the waters of South East Asia, reminds me of the inhuman suffering they had to endure before many of them perished at sea or were finally able to land in a neighbouring country. Their suffering outweighed those of our own refugees in India. And the generosity shown to the latter by the government and people of India also far exceeded our own treatment of refugees from Myanmar.


I acknowledge that the host population in refugee-receiving countries suffer a great deal due to the presence of a large alien population amidst them. We should remember, however, that we too had imposed a similar burden on our hosts in India. That was resolved even though many in India had feared that the refugees would never return to Bangladesh. Similarly, over five hundred thousand Myanmarese refugees have returned to their country over the last three decades. In fact, I had accompanied a large group of these refugees back to Myanmar in 1979. When circumstances permit, refugees do return home. It is only when the circumstances are dire that they remain in their country of asylum for a long time. The history of world refugees is replete with examples of how they have endured most formidable difficulties and found durable solutions in the end. In the process, they have also contributed in so many ways to the host societies.

As human beings, we owe it to all other human beings to be given an opportunity to find humane solutions to their problems, however impossible they may appear at a given time. Let me end by quoting our Prime Minister: “We must seize this historic opportunity and deliberate on a robust, ambitious and bold commitment to protect refugees both to address current issues and to prepare the world for future challenges.” This is bold statesmanship indeed.

Let us hope that our Prime Minister will pursue her efforts with the Myanmarese leadership to find durable solutions to the refugees who come to our country. In the meantime, let all those engaged in policy making and in physically pushing back refugees from our territory take heed of the commitment of our Prime Minister to protect refugees.

The writer is a former Director of UNHCR and Chairman Research Initiative, Bangladesh (RIB).
http://www.thedailystar.net/opinion/human-rights/protecting-refugees-myanmar-1318786
 
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Oh look another thread on the rohingyas.

Maybe rename this shit into - Rohingya Defence Forum.
We should ask a mod to create a separate section for Rohynga issue. Or better a Myanmar defense forum. That guy @alaungphaya created more threads in Bangladesh section than any other section.
 
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1. Thank you, China. By contrast Muslims and Bengalis of BD are turning away - such is the hold of the Delhi govt.
2. Gradually China is coming round in its assessment of the true nature of the Burmans. That is surprising given that China herself has centuries of feud with the Burmans. It has been total expediency for China to support the Buddhist Rakhines of Arakan so far much to the remorse of the Rohingyas.
3. The Chinese nationality holders within Burma should now race for yet another round of the periodic anti-Chinese riots to begin.
 
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