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Mad rush to repatriate Rohingya refugees
There is no indication the situation in Myanmar’s Rakhine State is stable or secure enough to begin a resettlement
By Angshuman Choudhury – Researcher & Coordinator, SEARP, New Delhi, India. FEBRUARY 2, 2018.
On January 22, 2018 Bangladesh announced that the repatriation of 655,000 Rohingya refugees currently housed in multiple camps in Cox’s Bazar district would not commence as scheduled the following day. A bilateral pact signed with Myanmar in November set the groundwork for sending 1,500 refugees back to northern Rakhine every week until all of those who fled violence sparked by the insurgent Arakan Rohingya Solidarity Army’s (ARSA) attacks on security forces last August 25. The United Nations and others have characterized the Myanmar military’s retaliatory “clearance operations” as “ethnic cleansing.”
The ambitious plan poses a daunting logistical challenge to both governments. Before any batch-wise return can commence, authorities in Myanmar are supposed to verify an advance list of refugees sent by their counterparts in Bangladesh. This back-and forth verification process, to be done on the basis of residency documents provided by the refugees, is bound to be time-consuming and contentious.
This is especially because the UNHCR – an organization with extensive global experience of refugee supervision and repatriation – has largely been blocked from the process. But the problems are more than logistical. Both governments are obligated to ensure that the refugees are sent back in a manner that upholds established norms of repatriation, i.e. under safe, dignified and voluntary conditions. It’s not clear that any of those three standards can credibly be upheld in the current circumstances.
There is little to no indication, save for the unsubstantiated claims of de-escalation by the Myanmar government, that the situation in northern Rakhine is stable. The initial bout of violence – triggered by ARSA attacks on security forces and the Myanmar military’s brutal ‘counterinsurgency’ response – has faded but not ended.
In a situation where refugees are still on the move, repatriation is a bizarrely counterintuitive strategy that contravenes the very spirit of refugee return and if carried out risks charges of refoulement. Safe return can only happen after the distress movement has ceased under international law. The current environment in Rakhine State – a culturally complicated and politically restive state – remains tense and not conducive for any kind of refugee resettlement or reintegration.
The ethnic Rakhines, according to the government itself, are key to stability in the state. However, the public mood among the Rakhine majority population is hardly reconciliatory. And the government’s plan to bring the Rohingya from Bangladesh back is a further hit of the hammer. For many ethnic Rakhines, the Rohingya would be best resettled in Bangladesh or at a minimum confined to their own impoverished rural tracts in Rakhine’s furthest northern reaches.
Bringing the Rohingya back thus has the volatile potential to complicate an already tense relationship between the Bamar dominated union government of Aung San Suu Kyi (and her party’s local government in Rakhine) and local ethnic Rakhines, many of whom feel successive administrations have not been sufficiently mindful of their cultural integrity and territorial sovereignty. The sharpening of this precarious relationship could lead to further unrest and anti-Rohingya drives, which could spur a fresh conflict cycle and complicate the delicate arrangement between Myanmar and Bangladesh.
This does not bode well for the over half a million traumatized, wounded, and homeless Rohingyas who were just forcefully evicted out of their homes in northern Rakhine and now await return into the throes of the same pot that smoked them out. There is also a strong possibility that the Myanmar military, or Tatmadaw, initiates a fresh counterinsurgency drive in its characteristic scorched-earth style and employs harsh screening measures for returning Rohingyas. Myanmar has already prepared a list of 1,300 suspected ‘terrorists,’ which was also relayed to the Bangladeshi government at a Joint Working Group meeting held on January 14.
Myanmar has repeatedly denied entry to UN-mandated investigators who are supposed to conduct a fair inquiry into the allegations, courtesy of an international fact-finding mission sanctioned by the Human Rights Council in March 2017.
Moreover, the Tatmadaw only recently admitted to extrajudicial killings of ten Rohingyas ( in Inden Village of Maungdaw South)– a rare admission but only partial confirmation of the allegations of mass killings. However, this is likely just the tip of the iceberg. On January 31, an Associated Press investigation confirmed the existence of five more previously unreported mass graves in the village of Gu Day Pyin.