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Bangladesh postpones Rohingya relocation plan

Bangladesh has yet again postponed Rohingya relocation plan. The scheme had elicited concerns that the site was less than ideal. Dhaka since said it undertook projects to improve living conditions on the Bhasan char islet.

Bangladesh postpones Rohingya relocation plan
Bangladesh postpones Rohingya relocation plan
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Published : Feb 26, 2020, 4:29 PM IST

Dhaka: Bangladesh has yet again shelved a controversial plan to relocate some 100,000 Rohingya refugees to a flood-prone island in the Bay of Bengal.

Authorities have long sought to relocate some of the country's million-plus Rohingya population to Bhashan Char, despite warnings the silty strip of land was prone to violent and potentially deadly monsoon storms.

Bhasan Char, a remote islet where the Bangladesh announced in 2018 it would resettle Rohingya refugees, is measured 15,000 acres at low tide and 10,000 acres at high tide, according to the government sources.

The move would take some pressure off the overcrowded border camps home to huge numbers of the persecuted and stateless Muslim minority, most of whom fled neighbouring Myanmar in 2017 after a brutal military crackdown.

Read: Rohingya hail UN ruling ordering Myanmar to prevent genocide

But rights groups say that some refugees had been coerced into agreeing to relocation and the plan has been staunchly opposed by the Rohingya community at large.

Junior disaster management minister Enamur Rahman said Bangladesh would increase its focus on diplomatic talks aimed at returning the refugees home

"The relocation plan has been postponed," he said, adding that there had been "much progress" in repatriation discussions with Myanmar with China acting as intermediary.

Bangladesh and Myanmar have already signed a repatriation deal to send back some Rohingya to their homeland -- but safety fears mean very few have agreed to return.

Thousands are suspected to have been killed in Myanmar during the 2017 Rohingya crackdown and refugees brought reports of widespread rape and arson by soldiers and ethnic Rakhine mobs.

The military denies nearly all wrongdoing and insists its operations were justified in order to root out Rohingya insurgents. Bangladesh's navy has spent years building homes, facilities and flood walls on Bhashan Char at a cost of $280 million. (With inputs from AFP)

Dhaka: Bangladesh has yet again shelved a controversial plan to relocate some 100,000 Rohingya refugees to a flood-prone island in the Bay of Bengal.

Authorities have long sought to relocate some of the country's million-plus Rohingya population to Bhashan Char, despite warnings the silty strip of land was prone to violent and potentially deadly monsoon storms.

Bhasan Char, a remote islet where the Bangladesh announced in 2018 it would resettle Rohingya refugees, is measured 15,000 acres at low tide and 10,000 acres at high tide, according to the government sources.

The move would take some pressure off the overcrowded border camps home to huge numbers of the persecuted and stateless Muslim minority, most of whom fled neighbouring Myanmar in 2017 after a brutal military crackdown.

Read: Rohingya hail UN ruling ordering Myanmar to prevent genocide

But rights groups say that some refugees had been coerced into agreeing to relocation and the plan has been staunchly opposed by the Rohingya community at large.

Junior disaster management minister Enamur Rahman said Bangladesh would increase its focus on diplomatic talks aimed at returning the refugees home

"The relocation plan has been postponed," he said, adding that there had been "much progress" in repatriation discussions with Myanmar with China acting as intermediary.

Bangladesh and Myanmar have already signed a repatriation deal to send back some Rohingya to their homeland -- but safety fears mean very few have agreed to return.

Thousands are suspected to have been killed in Myanmar during the 2017 Rohingya crackdown and refugees brought reports of widespread rape and arson by soldiers and ethnic Rakhine mobs.

The military denies nearly all wrongdoing and insists its operations were justified in order to root out Rohingya insurgents. Bangladesh's navy has spent years building homes, facilities and flood walls on Bhashan Char at a cost of $280 million. (With inputs from AFP)

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