Myanmar must resettle Rohingya in their villages, says US

Myanmar must resettle Rohingya in their villages, says US
A State Department official has said it is Myanmar's responsibility to repatriate refugees and investigate allegations of abuses, while on a visit to neighbouring Bangladesh.
2 min read
05 November, 2017
More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since late August [Getty]

Myanmar must repatriate hundreds of thousands of Rohingya in their own villages following their exodus from the country's violence-wracked Rakhine state for Bangladesh, a senior State Department official said Saturday in Bangladesh's capital Dhaka.

Simon Henshaw, acting US assistant secretary of state who visited refugee camps in southeast Bangladesh, said Myanmar should also punish those who committed atrocities in Rakhine.

"First of all, it is (Myanmar's) responsibility to return security and stability to Rakhine state. Secondly, it's their responsibility to investigate reports of atrocities and bring those who committed them to accountability," Henshaw told reporters in Dhaka.

"Part of bringing people back to Rakhine state requires these people be allowed to return to their land.... And for those whose villages are burnt, quick efforts need to be made to restore their homes and their villages," he said.

More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since late August carrying accounts of murder, rape and arson at the hands of Myanmar's powerful army during a military crackdown.

The UN has described the military onslaught as a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing".

They have taken refuge in squalid camps in southeast Bangladesh, joining the more than 200,000 Rohingyas who had set up homes there after escaping earlier bouts of violence.

After weeks of intense global pressure, Myanmar agreed to take back Rohingya who meet "verification" standards. But the criteria remains vague, raising fears it will be used to restrict the number of returnees.

Experts say repatriation would be complicated by the sheer scale of destruction in Rakhine, where hundreds of Rohingya villages have been reduced to ash.

According to aid workers, some refugees have expressed a reluctance to return if it would mean living in camp-like settlements or being barred from occupying the land they had before.

US lawmakers on Friday proposed sanctions against Myanmar's military, in some of the strongest efforts yet by Washington to pressure the Southeast Asian nation to end abusive treatment of the Muslim minority.

Myanmar authorities say the security crackdown was in response to attacks by Rohingya militants on police posts in late August.

For decades, the Rohingya have faced discrimination in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where they are denied citizenship and denigrated as illegal "Bengali" immigrants.