Thursday, 28 Nov 2024

Bangladesh begins transfer of Rohingya to controversial island

COX’S BAZAR (AFP) – Bangladesh began transferring several hundred Rohingya refugees on Thursday (Dec 3) to what the UN and rights groups worry is a dangerous low-lying island prone to cyclones and floods.

Almost a million Rohingya – most of whom fled a military offensive in neighbouring Myanmar in 2017 – live in a vast network of squalid camps in south-east Bangladesh.

With many of them refusing to return without guarantees for their safety and rights, and with violent drug gangs and extremists active on the sites, the Bangladeshi government has grown increasingly impatient to clear out the camps.

On Thursday at least 10 buses left the camps in the Cox’s Bazar region, headed for the port city of Chittagong, police said.

“Ten buses carrying some 400 have left for the island,” local police chief Ahmed Sunjur Morshed told AFP.

From Chittagong, the refugees were due to be taken by military landing craft to the island of Bhashan Char on Friday, officials said.

Earlier, the officials told AFP they planned to move around 2,500 people to the low-lying silt island in a first phase.

Scores of other buses were standing by at the camps in the Cox’s Bazar region, an AFP reporter at the scene said.

But it was unclear if more people would board the buses, with rights groups alleging that some of the refugees had been coerced into volunteering to be transferred.

Bhashan Char, measuring 52 sq km, is one of several silty strips to have surfaced in the area in recent decades.

The Bangladesh Navy has built shelters there for at least 100,000 Rohingya refugees as well as a 3m embankment to prevent flooding.

But locals say high tides flooded the island as recently as a few years ago and that cyclones, a regular occurence in the region, can cause storm surges of four or five metres.

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The United Nations office in Bangladesh issued a terse statement on Thursday saying it was “not involved” in the relocation process and had been given “limited information”.

It said the UN had not been allowed to independently assess the “safety, feasibility and sustainability” of the island as a place to live.

It said the refugees “must be able to make a free and informed decision about relocating” and that, once there, they should have access to education and health care – and be able to leave if they wish.

Mr Omar Faruq, one Rohingya leader who had been on a government trip, said the island was “truly beautiful”, with better facilities than in the refugee camps and that he would be ready to go, but that most people did not want to go there.

“We don’t want to end up living an isolated prison-like life,” said Ms Nurul Amin, one Rohingya refugee who was not on the list.

More than 300 refugees were taken to the island earlier this year after several months at sea in an attempt to flee Bangladesh.

Rights groups say they are being held against their will and have complained of human rights violations.

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