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What Happens if Rohingya Stay in Bangladesh Forever?

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What Happens if Rohingya Stay in Bangladesh Forever?
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Rohingya refugees play football at Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, on March 27, 2018. Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters
https://www.cfr.org/blog/what-happens-if-rohingya-stay-bangladesh-forever

Blog Post by Joshua Kurlantzick

September 4, 2019

had approved some three thousand Rohingya to return, with the backing of Bangladesh for this action. None apparently voluntarily took up the offer, instead fleeing back to the camps in Bangladesh or hiding out.

That Rohingya would not want to return to Myanmar is hardly surprising. It has been only two years since the deadliest wave of violence against them in Rakhine State. Rakhine State, where most Rohingya in Myanmar live, remains a violent and unstable place.

In recent months, violence in Rakhine State has been rising again, as the army battles the ethnic Rakhine Arakan Army. The military has resorted to its usual scorched earth tactics in response, and the UN’s human rights office has accused the Tatmadaw of launching attacks against civilians in this fighting. Amnesty International has further issued a report claiming that the Myanmar military is committing new atrocities in Rakhine State, against both ethnic Rakhine and Rohingya—including extrajudicial executions.

Meanwhile, the Myanmar government, while telling Rohingya that they can come back safely, has not exactly created a safe, trustworthy environment for their return. The ongoing violence in Rakhine State certainly does not indicate a strong prospect for safe return. Senior Myanmar government leaders continue to demonize the Rohingya and also refer to those still in Myanmar as illegals. A report released this week by Fortify Rights, a human rights and investigative group closely monitoring the situation for Rohingya, found that Myanmar authorities have continued to force Rohingya still living in Myanmar to accept National Verification Cards, which basically mark them as foreigners and preclude their getting citizenship rights. And the Myanmar and Bangladesh authorities did not appear to consult with Rohingya who were put on a list for repatriation, or prepare anywhere for them to restore their lives in Myanmar. The UN fact-finding mission found that the Myanmar government has simply leveled portions of northern Rakhine State where Rohingya had lived. Naypyidaw has done little to rebuild to prepare for a return, or offer infrastructure or social services of any kind in northern Rakhine State.

Instead, Myanmar companies are developing tracts of land formerly occupied by Rohingya. A UN fact-finding report released in early August found that the Tatmadaw’s “crony companies” are funding projects in Rakhine State now designed to reengineer the province’s ethnic makeup and “erase evidence of Rohingya belonging to Myanmar.”

Instead, the more than one million Rohingya in Bangladesh may try to stay in Bangladesh indefinitely, a scenario that is becoming increasingly plausible—though as Bertil Lintner notes, the Bangladesh government desperately does not want them to remain. Already, the camp on the Myanmar-Bangladesh border is the largest refugee camp in the world, overflowing with people, crowded, and highly vulnerable to disease and human trafficking. As Lintner notes, Bangladeshi citizens are growing increasingly resentful of the refugees and worried that they might take locals’ jobs, the camp’s massive size is causing environmental damage, and there are real fears that, the longer so many Rohingya stay as refugees in desperate conditions in Bangladesh, they could become targets for radicalization by extremist groups. Yet given the abysmal prospects for Rohingya if they returned to Myanmar, he is probably correct to note that the Rohingya are “there to stay” in Bangladesh, at least for a long time.

If this is the reality, what can Bangladesh, and other governments and aid agencies do about it? For one, while continuing to prepare for the (remote) possibility that Rohingya would be safely repatriated to Myanmar, the UN and other third party actors could push harder for a third country settlement solution for at least some Rohingya. There is at least some precedent for this option—Bhutanese refugees in Nepal have almost all been resettled in third countries—although it will obviously be difficult in the current global environment of large refugee flows and leaders increasingly opposed to taking in refugees. Still, there are third countries, in the region and globally, where more Rohingya resettlement might be possible in at least modest numbers, including Malaysia, Indonesia, and Canada. Yet the likelihood is that the Rohingya are going to remain in Bangladesh, and both the Bangladesh government and outside actors need to prepare for that possibility.
 
The solution is not to give them Bangladeshi citizenship, they becoming a public liability to the govt.

The solution is to either,

a) Create a situation conducive to their return in Arakan by giving them Myanmarese citizenship, or

b) Let the Myanmarese cede land to these people, which they can rightfully claim (having lived there for multiple meaning over five generations).

The second option may be less palatable to Myanmar, so first option is better.

UN and NGO's have to turn up the heat on Myanmar, having been backbone-less morons so far. Bangladesh govts. patience on this has run out already. Things will get tougher and tougher from now on.

UN cannot keep on paying the bills for housing and feeding these people forever. And some point they have to become Myanmar's liability.
 
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The solution is not to give them Bangladeshi citizenship, they becoming a public liability to the govt.

The solution is to either,

a) Create a situation conducive to their return in Arakan by giving them Myanmarese citizenship, or

b) Let the Myanmarese cede land to these people, which they can rightfully claim (having lived there for multiple meaning over five generations).

The second option may be less palatable to Myanmar, so first option is better.

UN and NGO's have to turn up the heat on Myanmar, having been backbone-less morons so far. Bangladesh govts. patience on this has run out already. Things will get tougher and tougher from now on.

UN cannot keep on paying the bills for housing and feeding these people forever. And some point they have to become Myanmar's liability.

True. But the way ground situation is heading. And no clear national policy. It seems like it will be a major problem for Bangladesh for years to come. Myanmar is in no pressure whatsoever. UN and NGO's will do nothing as they always do. Except some NGO's might spread negative propaganda about Bangladesh. Even though it gave them shelter some Myanmar based agents are spreading anti-Bangladeshi propaganda amongst them.
 
Bangladesh is small country. We can not keep Rohingyas forever. They are also very medieval minded people. They will ruin the social fabric of the country with their backwardness. Ohh God, save Bangladesh from Rohingyas.
 
Bangladesh is small country. we can not keep Rohingyas forever. They are also very medieval minded people. They will ruin to social fabric of the country with their backwardness. Ohh God, save Bangladesh from Rohingyas.

What if, instead of Rohingyas, there was 1 million Indian refugees instead...same opinion ?

Also welcome back, the PDF community missed you dearly*
 
What if, instead of Rohingyas, there was 1 million Indian refugees instead...same opinion ?

Also welcome back, the PDF community missed you dearly*

Indians are progressive people. Indians and Bangladeshis are same people. So its hard to say who is Indian and who Bangladeshi. Same people. Rohingyas are backward people despite they are also Muslims. Bangladeshis really hate Rohingyas a lot. Believe me, we can not tolerate Rohingyas at all.

They are so medieval that its really surprising how does such people exists in real life. So backward and stupid people. They use Bangladeshi passport and go middle east and do all illegal activities there.
 
What if, instead of Rohingyas, there was 1 million Indian refugees instead...same opinion ?

Also welcome back, the PDF community missed you dearly*
Indians wouldn’t scoff at free contraceptives, Rohyngas do, their recent Yaba trade spike, prostitution and sexual exploitation of women and crimes committed abroad on illegally obtained Bangladeshi passport is putting Bangladesh to shame.
 

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