Sunday

Bangladeshi newspaper said Dhaka Won't Recognise Undocumented Entrants Rohingya Refugee

Excerpt from unattributed report headlined "No Fresh Listing of Rohingyas: Foreign Secy Says Dhaka Won't Recognise Undocumented Entrants" published by Bangladeshi newspaper The Daily Star website on 11 April

Bangladesh will not give in to western pressure for recognition to the large number of undocumented Myanmar [Burma] nationals who entered the country illegally as refugees, said Foreign Secretary Mohamed Mijarul Quayes yesterday.

The foreign secretary made the comment at a press conference at the foreign ministry following the proposal of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for fresh registration of the Myanmar intruders.

Mijarul said the regional coordinator of UNHCR had recently made the proposal to the government.

"We have categorically told them that the proposal is not acceptable," he told reporters.

"We don't want to discuss the issue with UNHCR or others. They are undocumented Myanmar nationals and they must go back to their homeland," the foreign secretary stressed.

The government only recognises 28,000 Rohingyas staying at two UNHCR-administered camps in Cox's Bazar, he said.

More than three lakh illegal Myanmar nationals are staying outside the two camps set up in Nowapara and Kutupalong of Cox's Bazar district [on the south-east]. There are, however, no official statistics for illegal Rohingyas.

Mijarul said the government is very "tolerant and flexible" to thousands of illegal Myanmar nationals who are involved in various economic activities.

The foreign secretary said the government is allowing them to take health services on humanitarian ground.

"We have not dumped them in the concentration camps. But this is not our weakness. Our efforts are on to repatriate them," maintained Mijarul.

He also criticised some international NGOs and media for presenting "untrue" stories about Rohingya refugees.

Some western diplomats and legislators have recently visited Cox's Bazar to see for themselves the poor living conditions of Rohingyas. International pressures are there on the government to give recognition to illegal Myanmar nationals.

UNHCR, with the help of Bangladesh and Myanmar government, registered over 200,000 Rohngyas as refugees. UNHCR helped repatriate most of the refugees. Over 28,000 Rohingyas, however, refused to return to their homeland in Rakhain state.

The local administration in Cox's Bazar said that most of the previously repatriated Rohingyas re-entered Bangladesh because of poverty there.

Maritime Boundary:

On maritime boundary with Myanmar, the foreign secretary said the gap with the neighbour has been reduced substantially on the long- standing issue of demarcating maritime boundary.

He said the 6th Technical Committee meeting held in Myanmar on March 17-18 made some progress as Myanmar side shifted its position recognising Bangladesh's plea for "equity" principle.

Mijarul said Bangladesh completed the seismic survey in the Bay of Bengal and the results are satisfactory. On the basis of the survey results, he said, Bangladesh will submit its claim on its territorial sea in the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) by the deadline of July 11, 2011.

Nuclear power plant:

Mijarul said a high-powered delegation led by two advisers of the prime minister -- Dr Toufiq-e-Elahi Chowhdury and Dr Mashiur Rahman - - are now visiting Russia and Poland where they will discuss all possible sources of energy starting from nuclear to solar energy.

He said earlier Bangladesh and Russia signed an MoU for cooperation in using nuclear energy for peaceful purpose.

"Foreign Minister Dipu Moni will visit Moscow soon and hold talks with her Russian counterpart on wide-ranging issues including the nuclear power plant," Mijarul told reporters.

Immigrants cut their way out of Malaysian detention centre

Sixteen migrants were on the run Monday after cutting their way out of a detention centre at Malaysia's main international airport, immigration officials said.

Sixteen migrants were on the run Monday after cutting their way out of a detention centre at Malaysia's main international airport, immigration officials said.

The group, 12 Afghan and four Myanmar nationals, got through the gate of a facility at Kuala Lumpur airport where officials said they were being held for their own protection.

"The 16 are believed to have cut through the wire mesh of the gate and escaped the centre where they were being protected from human trafficking syndicates," Selangor state immigration chief Johari Yusof said.

"The Afghans were part of a group of 18 we had rescued in October last year from a ship adrift off our coast as these malnourished victims who were on the verge of death from starvation were being smuggled to a third country," he added.

"The members of the (trafficking) syndicate have already been charged in court and the government was in the process of resolving the victim's situation but obviously they could not wait for this."

Johari said police were looking for the group.

Immigration activists say Malaysia is often used as a staging post for trafficking gangs moving people from Afghanistan and Myanmar to Indonesia and Australia.

Earlier this month, maritime authorities picked up 93 members of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslim minority who had drifted aboard a boat for 30 days after fleeing their country.

Malaysian police last July arrested five immigration officials for involvement in an international syndicate that smuggled Rohingya refugees into the country.

With one of Asia's largest populations of foreign labour, Malaysia relies on its 2.2 million migrants to clean homes, care for children and work in plantations and factories.

The ambassadors of US Ambassador ,Canada, France, the UK, Denmark, Switzerland Said there is no obstacle to repatriation of Rohingya refugees to their

US Ambassador to Bangladesh James F Moriarty yesterday said there is no obstacle to repatriation of Rohingya refugees to their homeland in Myanmar.
"If the Myanmar government had sincerity the repatriation process could start right now," the US envoy told journalists after a view exchange meeting with government and non-government officials in Cox's Bazar.
The meeting was held during a visit by ambassadors of eight countries posted in Bangladesh to a Rohingya refugee camp at Kutupalong in Ukhia upazila of Cox's Bazar. The UNHCR organised the diplomatic visit.
The ambassadors of Canada, France, the UK, Denmark, Switzerland and Germany were the other members of the delegation.
During the visit, the diplomats also talked with the Rohingya refugees staying in the camps. Besides, they visited schools with computers for Rohingya children set up at different training centers.
The envoys went to Nayapara Rohingya camp at Teknaf by road. After staying there for about two hours they returned to Cox's Bazar.
About 28,000 Rohingya refugees are living in the two camps at Ukhia and Teknaf. Repatriation of the Rohingya refugee have remained stalled for about four and a half years due to non-cooperation by Myanmar and unwillingness of the refugees to return to their homeland.
Earlier on Wednesday, the ambassadors met with the deputy commissioner of Cox's Bazar