Won’t accept any more Rohingya refugees: Bangladesh tells UN

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Refugees in the Kutupalong Rohingya Refugee Camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh

Dhaka,  Bangladesh has told the UN that it won’t accept any more Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, the first time the country has threatened to close its borders to members of the Muslim minority fleeing violence.

Bangladesh is now sheltering more than a million refugees in camps, some 700,000 of whom have poured over the border in the past 18 months having fled a military-led crackdown in Rakhine state where thousands were killed, women were raped and villages razed, the Guardian reported on Friday.

Speaking to the UN Security Council on Thursday, Bangladesh Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque said: “I regret to inform the council that Bangladesh would no longer be in a position to accommodate more people from Myanmar.”

Most of the Rohingya arrived in Bangladesh between August and December 2017 in the midst of the brutal campaign of violence the UN has described as ethnic cleansing and possible genocide.

Last year, about 16,000 Rohingya crossed the border to Bangladesh, fleeing ongoing abuses.

Bangladesh was lauded for its willingness to keep its borders open and welcome the hundreds of thousands of refugees with open arms.

However Haque said the situation in Cox’s Bazar – where the millions of mainly Rohingya refugees are living in what has become the world’s largest refugee camp – was now untenable and had gone from “bad to worse”.

“Is Bangladesh paying the price for being responsive and responsible in showing empathy to a persecuted minority population of a neighbouring country?” Haque asked.

Haque expressed his frustration with both the Security Council and the international community at the lack of concrete action to solve the crisis.

He accused Myanmar of trying to shift the blame by accusing Bangladesh of harbouring terrorists when in fact the Bangladesh government had “a zero-tolerance policy” in this regard.

Haque was joined in his condemnation of Myanmar’s failure to take steps towards repatriation of Rohingya by envoys from western governments including the UK and the US, reports the Guardian.

Initial attempts to begin a repatriation process for the Rohingya last year collapsed after Myanmar failed to provide assurances to the refugees that they would be safe from violence, be allowed to return to their original homes, have freedom of movement and be given a pathway to citizenship in Myanmar, which the Rohingya were stripped of in 1974.

As a result, the thousands of Rohingya listed for return refused, and many went into hiding.