Myanmar is not ready for the repatriation of Rohingya refugees, said the most senior UN official to visit the country this year, after Myanmar was accused of instigating ethnic cleansing and driving nearly 700,000 Muslims to Bangladesh.
“From what I’ve seen and heard from people — no access to health services, concerns about protection, continued displacements — conditions are not conducive to return,” UN Assistant Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Ursula Mueller said after a six-day visit to Myanmar.
The Burmese government has pledged to do its best to make sure repatriation under an agreement signed with Bangladesh in November last year would be “fair, dignified and safe.”
Photo: AFP
Myanmar has so far verified several hundred Rohingya Muslim refugees for possible repatriation.
The group would be “the first batch” of refugees and could come back to Myanmar “when it was convenient for them,” a Burmese official said last month.
Mueller was granted rare access in Myanmar, allowed to visit the most affected areas in Rakhine state, and met army-controlled ministers of defense and border affairs, as well as de facto Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other civilian officials.
The exodus of Rohingya Muslims followed an Aug. 25 last year crackdown by the military in the northwestern Rakhine state. Rohingya refugees reported killings, burnings, looting and rape, in response to militant attacks on security forces.
“I asked [Burmese officials] to end the violence ... and that the return of the refugees from [Bangladeshi refugee camps in] Cox’s Bazar is to be on a voluntary, dignified way, when solutions are durable,” Mueller told reporters in an interview in Myanmar’s largest city, Yangon.
Myanmar and Bangladesh in January agreed to complete a voluntary repatriation of the refugees in two years.
Myanmar set up two reception centers and what it has said a temporary camp near the border in Rakhine to receive the first arrivals.
“We are right now at the border ready to receive, if the Bangladeshis bring them to our side,” Burmese Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Kyaw Tin told reporters in January.
Many in the Buddhist-majority Myanmar regard the Rohingya as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
The UN has described Myanmar’s counteroffensive as ethnic cleansing, which Myanmar denies.
Asked whether she believed in government assurances the Rohingya would be allowed to return to their homes after a temporary stay in camps, Mueller said: “I’m really concerned about the situation.”
Part of the problem is that, according to New York-based Human Rights Watch, Myanmar has bulldozed at least 55 villages that were emptied during the violence.
“I witnessed areas where villages were burned down and bulldozed... I’ve not seen or heard that there are any preparations for people to go to their places of origin,” Mueller said.
Burmese officials have said the villages were bulldozed to make way for refugee resettlement.
Mueller said she has also raised the issue with Burmese officials of limited humanitarian aid access to the vulnerable people in the country and added, referring to the authorities, that she would “push them on granting access” for aid agencies.
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