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Myanmar’s Hindu Refugees in Bangladesh Want to Go Home

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Myanmar’s Hindu Refugees in Bangladesh Want to Go Home, But None Have so Far

Myanmar says they are welcome back, but the UN says none have applied to return.
  • 2019-09-12



myanmar-hindu-rohingya-refugee-kutupalong-camp-bangladesh-nov15-2018.jpg

A Hindu Rohingya refugee holding her newborn looks outside her shelter at the Kutupalong refugee camp in southeastern Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district, Nov. 15, 2018.
Hindu Rohingya refugees who fled a military crackdown in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state two years ago have issued an appeal to State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi to let them leave refugee camps in Bangladesh where they are now living and return to Myanmar, according to a mobile phone video obtained by RFA.

Several hundred Hindus along with more than 740,000 Muslim Rohingyas fled to safety in Bangladesh after deadly attacks on police outposts by the militant group the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) sparked a brutal military crackdown in late August 2017.

Though the governments of Myanmar and Bangladesh have agreed to repatriate the refugees, their two attempts to return some of the Hindu and Rohingya refugees failed when no one showed up at the border for re-entry processing.

The stateless Rohingya, who face systematic discrimination in Myanmar because they are viewed as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, have refused to return unless they are granted full citizenship, recognition as a national ethnic group, and basic rights, and until they are guaranteed a safe environment. The Rohingya say they had Myanmar citizenship, but it was stripped away in 1982.

Aye Lwin, a Muslim leader in Myanmar who was a member of a commission headed by former U.N. chief Kofi Annan that called for an end to restrictions on the Rohingya minority to prevent further violence in Rakhine state, said the Rohingyas’ demands are untenable.

“They demand to be recognized as a national ethnic group without any verification,” he said. “There is a huge difference between granting citizenship and recognizing a national ethnic group.”

“But this demand has prevented the reaching of a resolution, so we have suggested that they make these demands later,” he said.

Hindu refugees in the Bangladeshi camps, however, told BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated online news service, that they are willing to return to Myanmar.

Some of those who wish to return have government-issued National Verification Cards that identify them as “foreigners,” but unlike the Muslim Rohingya, they are not making any demands linked to repatriation.

Shishu Shil, a 32-year old Hindu refugee who lives at the Kutupalaung camp in southeastern Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar District said in the video that he and some of the other hundreds of Hindus there are prepared to return to their homes in Myanmar.

If Myanmar takes us back, we will go,” he said. “The reason we want to go back is because the Myanmar government did not bother us. And the Bangladeshi government is also not bothering us.

“We don’t want to stay in a foreign country,” Shishu Shil added. “We have no demands for Myanmar or for this country for our return. But during our return and afterwards when we are living Myanmar, we want only one assurance — that [Haraka] al-Yaqin [ARSA] will not bother us.”

‘We have no demands’

Minto Rudra, a 51-year-old Hindu refugee, also said in the video that he is willing to return to Myanmar.

“The Myanmar government did not abuse us, rather those people dressed in black [ARSA militants] did,” he said. “Then we came to Bangladesh. The Bangladeshi government provides us with food and protects us well, but now we want to go back to Myanmar.”

“We have no demands,” he added. “We will go any place where the Myanmar government will let us. … Even if everyone doesn’t go, I think at least 400 to 450 of us will want to go back.”

Sonabala, a 57-year-old Hindu who lives in Kutupalaung camp with her daughter, said they both want to return to Myanmar because of the hardship they face in Bangladesh where refugees must deal with dengue fever, rainwater in their shelters, damaged roofs, and limited food supplies.

“The World Food Programme provides us with food once a month,” she said. “They give us food worth 770 Bangladesh taka (U.S. $9). How can we manage with this?”

Min Thu, minister for the Office of the Myanmar Government, said his country has been waiting to repatriate the Hindus living in Bangladeshi camps.

“We are also willing to bring them back, especially the 444 Hindus there, so we will continue to discuss this with the Bangladeshi government at the ministerial level,” he said.



myanmar-hindu-rohingya-refugees-kutapalong-bangladesh-nov13-2018.jpg

Hindu Rohingya refugees from western Myanmar's Rakhine pump water in a refugee camp in southeastern Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district, Nov. 13, 2018. Credit: AFP
‘We don’t differentiate’


On the day that ARSA carried out its attacks, a group of extremists invaded Hindu villages in northern Rakhine state and massacred about 100 Hindu men, women, and children.

They also abducted a handful of women and took them to the Bangladeshi refugee camps where they forced them to convert to Islam.


The violence and the subsequent crackdown by the Myanmar military prompted about 30,000 Hindus and other non-Muslims living in northern Rakhine to flee south to the Rakhine towns of Mrauk-U, Sittwe, Kyauktaw, and Minbya, according to the Myanmar government, while hundreds of other Hindus headed west to Bangladesh.

In January 2018, Myanmar agreed to take back 444 Hindus and nearly 780 Muslim Rohingya living in Bangladeshi camps without verification of their identities, but Dhaka turned down its proposal.

M. Shamim Ahamad, press minister for the Bangladesh Embassy in Washington, D.C., said his country does not differentiate among the various refugees in the massive displacement camps.

“Clearly, we don’t differentiate who is Hindu, who is Muslim, who is Christian … All are Rohingya, and there is a process of repatriation.”

Since then, thousands of other Rohingya have been approved for return under the terms of a November 2017 agreement between Myanmar and Bangladesh, but they have refused to go back.

Rohingya trust in Myanmar remains low, because the government has not acknowledged or held soldiers accountable for the well-documented campaign of rape and murder and the burning of Rohingya homes during the army’s counteroffensive in response to the ARSA attacks.

United Nations investigators have called for the prosecution of Myanmar’s top military commanders on charges of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court.

“[The Rohingya refugees’] demands include full citizenship and recognition as a national ethnic group. This is an illogical demand,” said Hau Do Suan, Myanmar’s permanent representative to the United Nations. “National ethnic groups are already designated and cannot be changed. It will make the repatriation process impossible.”

“But the Hindu refugees haven’t made any demands,” he said. “They accept the status we can grant them upon their return. That makes it work.”

‘They have a right to return’

Though the displaced Hindus in Bangladesh told BenarNews that they want to go back to Myanmar, the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) said no refugees have indicated that they would like to voluntarily return.

“If refugees want to return, they have a right to return. We have always made that clear,” Caroline Gluck, an UNHCR spokesperson based in Bangkok, told RFA's Myanmar Service on Sept. 6. “But as far as I am aware, our office has not received any requests from any refugees whether they are Muslims or Hindus wanting to go at this stage.”

Some of the displaced Hindus who fled to safety in other parts of Rakhine state during the 2017 crackdown have said they they do not want to return to their former homes.

Dozens of Hindus ordered by authorities to return to their community sent a joint letter to Myanmar’s Ministry of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development in January, imploring officials not to send them back to the township where their entire village was destroyed by ARSA.

The nearly 70 who were staying at a temple in Rakhine’s capital Sittwe said they were concerned about their safety if forced to return to their community.

During the Hindu refugees' stay in Bangladesh, a new safety threat has emerged in Rakhine — a low-intensity but deadly conflict throughout 2019 between the Myanmar military and Arakan Army, which is fighting for more autonomy for Buddhist Rakhine people in the state.

Reported by Khin Maung Soe for RFA’s Myanmar Service and by BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated online news service. Translated by Ye Kaung Myint Maung and BenarNews. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

https://www.rfa.org/english/news/myanmar/myanmars-hindu-refugees-in-bangladesh-09122019163813.html
 
Where is Indian govt sleeping, they should be allowed to come not only Hindus but people of all Dharmic ( Hindus , Buddhists , Jains , Sikhs ) religions should be allowed to come
 
Myanmar’s Hindu Refugees in Bangladesh Want to Go Home, But None Have so Far
No, the MM Hindu refugees should be sent to Assam and India should expel its Chinese-Ahom population to the jungles of Arunachal State.
 
No, the MM Hindu refugees should be sent to Assam and India should expel its Chinese-Ahom population to the jungles of Arunachal State.
The tribal Hindu Hajong refugees that you ethno-fascist genocidal Bangladeshi radicals have driven out from your country are currently housed in the jungles of Arunachal.

You radical nutjobs should vacate CHT and Sylhet immediately so that the tribals and Hindu Bengalis can be settled in their ancestral lands.
 
Myanmar’s Hindu Refugees in Bangladesh Want to Go Home, But None Have so Far

Myanmar says they are welcome back, but the UN says none have applied to return.




    • 2019-09-12


myanmar-hindu-rohingya-refugee-kutupalong-camp-bangladesh-nov15-2018.jpg

A Hindu Rohingya refugee holding her newborn looks outside her shelter at the Kutupalong refugee camp in southeastern Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district, Nov. 15, 2018.
Hindu Rohingya refugees who fled a military crackdown in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state two years ago have issued an appeal to State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi to let them leave refugee camps in Bangladesh where they are now living and return to Myanmar, according to a mobile phone video obtained by RFA.

Several hundred Hindus along with more than 740,000 Muslim Rohingyas fled to safety in Bangladesh after deadly attacks on police outposts by the militant group the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) sparked a brutal military crackdown in late August 2017.

Though the governments of Myanmar and Bangladesh have agreed to repatriate the refugees, their two attempts to return some of the Hindu and Rohingya refugees failed when no one showed up at the border for re-entry processing.

The stateless Rohingya, who face systematic discrimination in Myanmar because they are viewed as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, have refused to return unless they are granted full citizenship, recognition as a national ethnic group, and basic rights, and until they are guaranteed a safe environment. The Rohingya say they had Myanmar citizenship, but it was stripped away in 1982.

Aye Lwin, a Muslim leader in Myanmar who was a member of a commission headed by former U.N. chief Kofi Annan that called for an end to restrictions on the Rohingya minority to prevent further violence in Rakhine state, said the Rohingyas’ demands are untenable.

“They demand to be recognized as a national ethnic group without any verification,” he said. “There is a huge difference between granting citizenship and recognizing a national ethnic group.”

“But this demand has prevented the reaching of a resolution, so we have suggested that they make these demands later,” he said.

Hindu refugees in the Bangladeshi camps, however, told BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated online news service, that they are willing to return to Myanmar.

Some of those who wish to return have government-issued National Verification Cards that identify them as “foreigners,” but unlike the Muslim Rohingya, they are not making any demands linked to repatriation.

Shishu Shil, a 32-year old Hindu refugee who lives at the Kutupalaung camp in southeastern Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar District said in the video that he and some of the other hundreds of Hindus there are prepared to return to their homes in Myanmar.

If Myanmar takes us back, we will go,” he said. “The reason we want to go back is because the Myanmar government did not bother us. And the Bangladeshi government is also not bothering us.

“We don’t want to stay in a foreign country,” Shishu Shil added. “We have no demands for Myanmar or for this country for our return. But during our return and afterwards when we are living Myanmar, we want only one assurance — that [Haraka] al-Yaqin [ARSA] will not bother us.”

‘We have no demands’

Minto Rudra, a 51-year-old Hindu refugee, also said in the video that he is willing to return to Myanmar.

“The Myanmar government did not abuse us, rather those people dressed in black [ARSA militants] did,” he said. “Then we came to Bangladesh. The Bangladeshi government provides us with food and protects us well, but now we want to go back to Myanmar.”

“We have no demands,” he added. “We will go any place where the Myanmar government will let us. … Even if everyone doesn’t go, I think at least 400 to 450 of us will want to go back.”

Sonabala, a 57-year-old Hindu who lives in Kutupalaung camp with her daughter, said they both want to return to Myanmar because of the hardship they face in Bangladesh where refugees must deal with dengue fever, rainwater in their shelters, damaged roofs, and limited food supplies.

“The World Food Programme provides us with food once a month,” she said. “They give us food worth 770 Bangladesh taka (U.S. $9). How can we manage with this?”

Min Thu, minister for the Office of the Myanmar Government, said his country has been waiting to repatriate the Hindus living in Bangladeshi camps.

“We are also willing to bring them back, especially the 444 Hindus there, so we will continue to discuss this with the Bangladeshi government at the ministerial level,” he said.



myanmar-hindu-rohingya-refugees-kutapalong-bangladesh-nov13-2018.jpg

Hindu Rohingya refugees from western Myanmar's Rakhine pump water in a refugee camp in southeastern Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district, Nov. 13, 2018. Credit: AFP
‘We don’t differentiate’


On the day that ARSA carried out its attacks, a group of extremists invaded Hindu villages in northern Rakhine state and massacred about 100 Hindu men, women, and children.

They also abducted a handful of women and took them to the Bangladeshi refugee camps where they forced them to convert to Islam.

The violence and the subsequent crackdown by the Myanmar military prompted about 30,000 Hindus and other non-Muslims living in northern Rakhine to flee south to the Rakhine towns of Mrauk-U, Sittwe, Kyauktaw, and Minbya, according to the Myanmar government, while hundreds of other Hindus headed west to Bangladesh.

In January 2018, Myanmar agreed to take back 444 Hindus and nearly 780 Muslim Rohingya living in Bangladeshi camps without verification of their identities, but Dhaka turned down its proposal.

M. Shamim Ahamad, press minister for the Bangladesh Embassy in Washington, D.C., said his country does not differentiate among the various refugees in the massive displacement camps.

“Clearly, we don’t differentiate who is Hindu, who is Muslim, who is Christian … All are Rohingya, and there is a process of repatriation.”

Since then, thousands of other Rohingya have been approved for return under the terms of a November 2017 agreement between Myanmar and Bangladesh, but they have refused to go back.

Rohingya trust in Myanmar remains low, because the government has not acknowledged or held soldiers accountable for the well-documented campaign of rape and murder and the burning of Rohingya homes during the army’s counteroffensive in response to the ARSA attacks.

United Nations investigators have called for the prosecution of Myanmar’s top military commanders on charges of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court.

“[The Rohingya refugees’] demands include full citizenship and recognition as a national ethnic group. This is an illogical demand,” said Hau Do Suan, Myanmar’s permanent representative to the United Nations. “National ethnic groups are already designated and cannot be changed. It will make the repatriation process impossible.”

“But the Hindu refugees haven’t made any demands,” he said. “They accept the status we can grant them upon their return. That makes it work.”

‘They have a right to return’

Though the displaced Hindus in Bangladesh told BenarNews that they want to go back to Myanmar, the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) said no refugees have indicated that they would like to voluntarily return.

“If refugees want to return, they have a right to return. We have always made that clear,” Caroline Gluck, an UNHCR spokesperson based in Bangkok, told RFA's Myanmar Service on Sept. 6. “But as far as I am aware, our office has not received any requests from any refugees whether they are Muslims or Hindus wanting to go at this stage.”

Some of the displaced Hindus who fled to safety in other parts of Rakhine state during the 2017 crackdown have said they they do not want to return to their former homes.

Dozens of Hindus ordered by authorities to return to their community sent a joint letter to Myanmar’s Ministry of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development in January, imploring officials not to send them back to the township where their entire village was destroyed by ARSA.

The nearly 70 who were staying at a temple in Rakhine’s capital Sittwe said they were concerned about their safety if forced to return to their community.

During the Hindu refugees' stay in Bangladesh, a new safety threat has emerged in Rakhine — a low-intensity but deadly conflict throughout 2019 between the Myanmar military and Arakan Army, which is fighting for more autonomy for Buddhist Rakhine people in the state.

Reported by Khin Maung Soe for RFA’s Myanmar Service and by BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated online news service. Translated by Ye Kaung Myint Maung and BenarNews. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.

https://www.rfa.org/english/news/myanmar/myanmars-hindu-refugees-in-bangladesh-09122019163813.html

This is just for eye wash attempt by Myanmar. They offered land and job only to the Rohingya Hindus not Muslims first to create a false impression Rohingyas are returning and create a good impression with India due to taking back Hindus when they did not spare them during genocide.

Getting land and job is lucrative deals than staying in a refugee camp with uncertain future. But Bangladesh won’t allow this kind of propaganda just for few hundred Hindus when more than million Rohingyas are in Bangladesh and no chance of return for them.
 
They should be welcomed in India.
Certainly. They are identified as Indian Hindu migrant in their ID cards issued by Myanmar and they don't mind, as they don't have spines.

This is just for eye wash attempt by Myanmar. They offered land and job only to the Rohingya Hindus not Muslims first to create a false impression Rohingyas are returning and create a good impression with India due to taking back Hindus when they did not spare them during genocide.

Getting land and job is lucrative deals than staying in a refugee camp with uncertain future. But Bangladesh won’t allow this kind of propaganda just for few hundred Hindus when more than million Rohingyas are in Bangladesh and no chance of return for them.
Hindu Rohingya accepted their 2nd class status in myanmar long time ago and work as their lackey and informant. Rohingya Muslims on the other hand fighting for their own identity.
 
India should welcome Rohingya Hindus and settle them in india!

Shame on indian hindus for failing to do so...
 
Hindu Rohingya accepted their 2nd class status in myanmar long time ago and work as their lackey and informant. Rohingya Muslims on the other hand fighting for their own identity.
Is that why your country asked the militant ARSA to terrorise, kill and convert the Hindus living in their midst? And stop calling them Hindu Rohingyas, it is a manufactured term and they don't have anything to do with your miyas.

They are Hindu Arakanese, and your government should let them go to their ancestral lands.
 
Is that why your country asked the militant ARSA to terrorise, kill and convert the Hindus living in their midst? And stop calling them Hindu Rohingyas, it is a manufactured term and they don't have anything to do with your miyas.

They are Hindu Arakanese, and your government should let them go to their ancestral lands.
They are not hindu Arakanese according to Burmese. They are Indian Hindu illegal immigrant and granted residency as 2nd class citizen. They need to apply for the same status for their children when they turn 18... :lol:

And these hindus changed the story of masked rakhine to maked arsa as the killer when they found that there are no ARSA in BD and is the easiest way to get favor from burmese once they return.
 
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And these hindus changed the story of masked rakhine to maked arsa as the killer when they found that there are no ARSA
Stop peddling lies, ARSA terror!st sympathizer. Living amidst the Rohingyas in same camps, they would never make the mistake of falsely implicating anyone. Your Rohingyas killed them, period. Just let them go to Myanmar, why are you imprisoning them in camps against their wishes. And whether they remain in Myanmar or come to India is none of your prerogative. You brought them over to BD to paint a false picture.

Btw, the below attached pictures are the difference how the Rohingya extremists and Hindu Arakanese remember those days.
EE16i-EVUAELPBc.png
EE16i-KVAAAFatc.png
 
Stop peddling lies, ARSA terror!st sympathizer. Living amidst the Rohingyas in same camps, they would never make the mistake of falsely implicating anyone. Your Rohingyas killed them, period. Just let them go to Myanmar, why are you imprisoning them in camps against their wishes. And whether they remain in Myanmar or come to India is none of your prerogative. You brought them over to BD to paint a false picture.

Btw, the below attached pictures are the difference how the Rohingya extremists and Hindu Arakanese remember those days.View attachment 580367 View attachment 580368
Nobody brought them here dumb ***... they were chased out by your dharmic brother in Burma. We saved their life. If they want to go back they have to take other refugee with them. We will no way allow them to go there and become a propaganda tool for the savage burmese..

Just look at these hindu loosers trying to frame Rohingya muslim setting fire on their own home.
And seems like it was them wearing black mask..

1024x1024.jpg


21317486_1682403638483030_2780651597281193773_n.jpg
 
Nobody brought them here dumb ***... they were chased out by your dharmic brother in Burma. We saved their life. If they want to go back they have to take other refugee with them. We will no way allow them to go there and become a propaganda tool for the savage burmese..

Just look at these hindu loosers trying to frame Rohingya muslim setting fire on their own home.
And seems like it was them wearing black mask..

1024x1024.jpg


21317486_1682403638483030_2780651597281193773_n.jpg

There were actually several YouTube videos of interviews of these Hindu Rohingyas in the refugee camps where they explicitly mentioned how the Tatmadaw troops massacred their families. I had shared them in this forum before they were taken down from YouTube.
 
There were actually several YouTube videos of interviews of these Hindu Rohingyas in the refugee camps where they explicitly mentioned how the Tatmadaw troops massacred their families. I had shared them in this forum before they were taken down from YouTube.
Yes checkout what these hindus were saying when they arrived in Bangladesh... You will get raw feeling here.
 
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