UN aid chief: No progress so Rohingya can return to Myanmar
UNITED NATIONS, Apr 30:The UN humanitarian chief has said there has been âno progressâ in dealing with the reasons why more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims fled to Bangladesh from western Myanmarâs Rakhine state.
Mark Lowcock, who just returned from a visit to Bangladesh, said on Monday Myanmar has failed âto put in place confidence-building measures that would persuade people itâs safe to go back.â He said all the refugees he spoke to didnât think it was safe to return, and want to be assured of things like freedom of movement and access to education, jobs and services.
Buddhist-majority Myanmar has long considered the Rohingya to be âBengalisâ from Bangladesh even though their families have lived in the country for generations. Nearly all have been denied citizenship since 1982, effectively rendering them stateless, and they are also denied freedom of movement and other basic rights.
The latest crisis began with attacks by an underground Rohingya insurgent group on Myanmar security personnel in August 2017 in northern Rakhine. Myanmarâs military responded with a brutal campaign and is accused of mass rape, killings and the burning of thousands of homes that critics have described as ethnic cleansing, or even genocide.
Lowcock told a small group of reporters he is âextremely worriedâ that the UN appeal for USD 962 million to provide for the Rohingya refugees and their host communities in Bangladesh this year is only 17 per cent funded.
âI think the world may be losing interest,â he said. âLast year, we got 70 per cent what we asked for. Weâre running way behind.â He warned that âif we donât get financed, the consequences will be seriousâ for the provision of such things as food rations and health services.
Lowcock visited Bangladesh with UN refugee chief Filippo Grandi and Antonio Vitorino, head of the International Office for Migration. In a joint statement, they stressed the need to sustain support for the Rohingya refugees and to keep working for âsafe and sustainable solutionsâ so they can return home.
They noted that almost half the 540,000 refugee children under age 12 are missing out on education and the rest are only getting very limited schooling.
âI think the world ought to worry about what this very large group of people will be like in 10 yearsâ time if they donât get an opportunity to access education and a chance to develop a livelihood and have a normal life,â Lowcock told reporters.
While the best solution would be for the refugees to return home, he said, âin any event itâs a bad idea to run the risk of a very aggrieved, disaffected large group of young people, especially young men.â
Lowcock said Bangladeshâs government expressed concern to the three UN officials during the trip about criminal activity among refugees in the Coxâs Bazaar area.
âThere are well-known concerns about the drugs industry trying to use populations in Coxâs Bazaar to support their malign activities,â Lowcock said, adding that there are also concerns about possible radicalization of refugees. (AGENCIES)
&&&
The post UN aid chief: No progress so Rohingya can return to Myanmar appeared first on Jammu Kashmir Latest News | Tourism | Breaking News J&K.
News posted by jknewsinfo Click Here Download JK News info Android app from play store
Comments
Post a Comment