HRW: Bangladesh: Halt ‘Pilot’ Plan to Return Rohingya
Repatriation to
Myanmar Under Military Junta Threatens Lives, Freedoms
Rohingya
refugees shout slogans against repatriation at Unchiprang camp near Cox's
Bazar, Bangladesh, November 15, 2018. © 2018 AP Photo/Dar Yasin
Bangkok) – Bangladesh authorities should suspend
plans to send Rohingya refugees back to Myanmar, where their lives and liberty would be at grave
risk, Human Rights Watch said today.
Rohingya
told Human Rights Watch that they were lied to, deceived, or otherwise coerced
by Bangladesh administrators into meeting with a recent delegation of Myanmar
junta officials as part of a “pilot repatriation” effort to return about 1,000
refugees. Some were told the meetings concerned possible resettlement to a third
country.
“Voluntary,
safe, and dignified returns of Rohingya refugees to Myanmar are not possible
while the military junta is carrying out massacres around the country and
apartheid in Rakhine State,” said Meenakshi Ganguly,
South Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Bangladesh authorities should stop
deceiving these refugees to get them to engage with junta officials when it’s
clear that Rohingya will only be able to return safely when rights-respecting
rule is established.”
Conditions
in Myanmar’s Rakhine State have not been conducive to voluntary, safe, or
dignified returns of Rohingya refugees since 2017, when more than 730,000
Rohingya fled the Myanmar military’s crimes against
humanity and acts of genocide. The prospect of durable
returns has grown ever more distant since the February 2021 military coup in
Myanmar, carried out by the same generals who orchestrated the 2017 mass
atrocities.
Bangladesh
has appropriately not compelled these refugees to return and should continue
that policy with the support of international donors, Human Rights Watch said.
A
delegation of 17 Myanmar junta officials visited the Cox’s Bazar camps in
Bangladesh, which house about one million Rohingya refugees, from March 15-22,
2023. The officials interviewed 449 Rohingya from 149
families in the Teknaf camps for “verification” for the pilot
repatriation process, media reported. A junta official told Agence France-Presse that
the pilot program could start as early as mid-April.
Human
Rights Watch spoke with 15 Rohingya about their verification interviews. Not
one said that they had been informed in advance that they would be meeting with
junta officials about being returned to Myanmar. All 15 said they had been
interviewed several times by Bangladesh authorities over the past two years,
but had never been told that their names were listed for possible return.
“I
wasn’t informed that I would be interviewed by the Myanmar delegation,” said a Rohingya
man interviewed by junta officials on March 15 along with 10 family members. “I
was called beforehand by the camp-in-charge [CiC, a Bangladesh official], who
told me to be present on the interview date at my shelter. When I asked why, he
said I would be interviewed for the opportunity to go abroad for resettlement.
I never realized it was a Myanmar delegation I was going to meet, or that it
was about repatriation.”
He
said that the CiC had threatened him: “He said that if we weren’t present for
the interview, we’d be forced by the police to appear. So, I doubted that it
was about resettlement options, and worried it was about repatriation instead.”
A majhi (Rohingya
community leader) who was interviewed by the delegation on March 21 said that
he was also not informed about the reason for the interview or those that
preceded it, and was similarly threatened by Bangladeshi officials with police
intervention when he resisted.
“Even
as majhis, we were not told why we were being called several times by the CiC
office to give family information,” he said. “They gave us false hope that a
group was coming to meet us for an opportunity to resettle. From my block, my
family and another family’s names appeared on the list. When we found out that
it was the Myanmar delegation we had to meet, we tried to oppose it, but the
authorities here threatened us. Some families from other camps fled their
shelters fearing they’d be forced to return.”
Two
prior repatriation attempts undertaken in November 2018 and August 2019failed,
with Rohingya refugees unwilling to return due to the ongoing persecution and
abuse in Myanmar. In January 2022, the Bangladesh government and Myanmar junta
renewed discussions around repatriation, announcing joint
plans to “expeditiously complete the verification process.” While Bangladesh’s
Foreign Minister A.K. Abdul has declared that
“early repatriation” is a top priority, he told BenarNews in
March 2023 that Bangladesh would not force refugees to return to Myanmar.
Bangladesh
officials reported that the 449 Rohingya were
interviewed to verify their identities and places of origin, joining a list of
over 700 refugees already confirmedfor
the pilot repatriation.
A
Rohingya woman interviewed on March 15 with her newborn baby and six other
family members said, “They were asking for family information and where we
lived when we were in Rakhine. They filled up about four to five pages of
documents. We weren’t shown what was written on them. Then they took our
thumbprints.” Rohingya interviewed on the first day were required to provide
thumbprints, which was reportedly stopped after community leaders raised
concerns with the Bangladesh authorities.
About
600,000 Rohingya remain in Rakhine State under the junta’s oppressive rule,
facing systematic abuses that amount to the crimes against humanity of apartheid, persecution, and
deprivation of liberty. The junta has imposed new movement restrictions
and aid blockages on Rohingya camps and villages, increasing
water scarcity and food shortages, along with disease and malnutrition. Since
the 2021 coup, security forces have arrested thousands of Rohingya men, women,
and children for “unauthorized travel.”
The
refugees said that the junta officials asked them about their relatives in Rakhine
State. “My family members who are still in Rakhine live in fear of persecution
by the military or insurgent groups,” a Rohingya man interviewed by the
delegation on March 16 said. “Now, if they end up in trouble because of me, who
will protect them?”
Rohingya
refugees have consistently said that they want to go home, but only when their
security, access to land and livelihoods, freedom of movement, and citizenship
rights can be ensured.
The
refugees said the delegation refused to answer any questions about whether
their land would be returned or if they would be granted citizenship and other
rights and freedoms. “If they really wanted to take us back, they wouldn’t
hesitate to answer any of our questions and ensure our rights,” said another
camp majhi interviewed by the delegation. “They only want to take us back to
Rakhine because they’re under pressure. We know they won’t let us go back to
our land, they’ll put us in that camp settlement forever. We’ll only go back
when they publicly commit to giving us the same rights as citizens in Myanmar
and getting our land and properties back.”
In
early March, junta officials took several diplomats to
Rakhine State’s Maungdaw township to visit the Nga Khu Ya reception center and
Hla Poe Kaung transit camp. The camps, built on Rohingya land in
2018 to process and house returnees, are surrounded by barbed-wire perimeter
fences and security outposts.
Junta
officials have also been visiting Rakhine in
preparation for their submission to the International Court of Justice, due by
April 24, in the Genocide Convention casebrought
by Gambia. Activists and refugees allege that the pilot repatriation project is
part of broader junta efforts to feign progress in its treatment of the
Rohingya to the court.
The
United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, provided unmarked UN boats to
transport the junta delegation to Cox’s Bazar. In response to criticism, UNHCR saidthat while it
is not involved in the pilot repatriation discussions, it “supports efforts
that could lead to the verification of all refugees and pave the way for
eventual return,” which in this case included “providing logistical support to
members of the Myanmar delegation to cross into Bangladesh for the technical
verification process.” UNHCR did assert that “conditions in Myanmar’s Rakhine
State are currently not conducive to the sustainable return of Rohingya
refugees.”
Fully
informed and voluntary returns depend, among other key factors, on providing
refugees with objective and accurate information about conditions in areas of
origin. UNHCR should not be providing logistical support to officials operating
under the same military leaders who oversaw the grave crimes the Rohingya fled,
in service of a repatriation plan that contravenes international standards,
Human Rights Watch said.
Since
2017, the Bangladesh government has respected the international principle of
nonrefoulement, the right of refugees not to be returned to a country where
their lives or freedom would be threatened. But Bangladesh authorities have
also been intensifying
restrictions on livelihoods, movement, and education that
compound refugees’ vulnerability and dependence on aid and appear designed to
coerce refugees into considering returning to Myanmar. Bangladesh should formalize
and expand education and employment opportunities to bolster Rohingya’s
self-reliance for their eventual return or resettlement.
“For
future returns to be truly voluntary, the Bangladesh authorities need to allow
Rohingya to live freely, without enforcing pressures pushing them to go back,”
Ganguly said. “Donors should increase support for a more sustainable life for
Rohingya today, which will help them develop the skills and independence needed
for the day when safe returns are possible.”
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