Bangladesh ‘will relocate Rohingya to remote island’

Bangladesh ‘will relocate Rohingya to remote island’
Rohingya Muslims make their way in an alley at a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, in this file photo. (AP)
Updated 01 February 2017
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Bangladesh ‘will relocate Rohingya to remote island’

Bangladesh ‘will relocate Rohingya to remote island’

DHAKA: Rohingya Muslims in Bangladesh are worried about a government proposal to relocate them to a low-lying island deemed not ready for people to live there.
The proposal briefly posted on a government website last week said a committee including representatives of the border guards and other agencies would prepare a list of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims to be relocated to the island of Thengar Char in southeastern Bangladesh. The Cabinet Division official who signed the circular admitted it was removed from the website but refused to comment further.
The low-lying island is in the estuary of the River Meghna and emerged from the sea only eight years ago. It is difficult to reach without boats and becomes flooded during any storm that causes a tidal surge. Thengar Char is about 30 kilometers (19 miles) east of the more-populated Hatiya island.
The government circular made no mention of what would be done to prepare the island for habitation or any potential timing.
Some 300,000 Rohingya Muslims have lived in Bangladesh for decades after fleeing there from neighboring Myanmar in the face of persecution by its military and majority Buddhists. An additional 66,000 Rohingya have arrived in Bangladesh since October, fleeing violent retaliation after the killings of nine Myanmar border police.
About 33,000 of them live in two official camps in the southern coastal district of Cox’s Bazar.
Abu Bakar Siddique, president of the unregistered Rohingya at Kutupalong camp in Cox’s Bazar, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that authorities have never discussed the prospect of relocation with them officially but they were aware of it from media reports.
“Frankly we want to go back to Myanmar if our rights are ensured. If that does not happen soon, we have no other way but to follow the Bangladesh government’s order. We have no other choices. We are worried,” he said.