Intellasia.net
 
 
 Services  Tenders BizFind Jobs Archive Search Contact  Tiếng Việt
Updated: 24 Apr, 2010 - 9:51:09 AM (GMT+7:00) RSS feed to Intellasia Vietnam News RSS Feed  Video Feeds
Intellasia News Online « back
Email this article Send to a friend     Printer friendly page Printer friendly   
 
  Stocks & Securities
 
  Business
 
  Finance
 
  Economy
 
  Property
 
  Resources
 
  Infrastructure
 
  Info-tech
 
  Agriculture
 
  Governance
 
  Legal News
 
  Society
  Health
 
  Regional
 
Hanoi
Click for Hanoi, Viet Nam Forecast
 
HCM City (Saigon)
Click for Ho Chi Minh, Viet Nam Forecast
 
Da Nang
Click for Da Nang, Viet Nam Forecast
 
forecasts-click images
 
 
Burma refugees 'starving to death' in Bangladesh
11-MAR-2010 Intellasia | AFP
11 Mar, 2010 - 7:03:00 AM
Free newsletter - click here
 
Bangladesh is waging a campaign of arbitrary arrest, illegal expulsion, forced internment and starvation against Muslim refugees from neighbouring Myanmar, according to a report released Tuesday.

Tens of thousands of unregistered Rohingya refugees, many of whom have lived in Bangladesh for decades, have been forced into makeshift camps where they are being left to starve to death, the report by Physicians for Human Rights says.

"It is unconscionable to leave this vulnerable population stateless and starving," said Richard Sollom, PHR director of research and investigations.

In this picture taken in 2009, a Rohingya refugee child stands in the doorway of a shelter at an unregistered shelter in Kutupalong, some 400kms south-east of Dhaka. Bangladesh is waging a campaign of arbitrary arrest, illegal expulsion and forced internment against Muslim refugees from neighbouring Myanmar, according to a report by Physicians for Human Rights. (AFP/File/Munir Uz Zaman)
"Haiti after the recent earthquake had an acute child malnutrition rate of six percent, in the Rohingya camps the rate is 18.2 percent -- three times higher but with no aid," he added.

Described by the United Nations as one of the most persecuted minorities on Earth, thousands of Rohingya from Myanmar's northern Rakhine state stream across the border into Muslim-majority Bangladesh every year.

Bangladesh recognises 28,000 Rohingya as registered refugees, who live and receive aid at an official UN camp in Kutupalong. This figure is a fraction of the 200,000 to 300,000 unofficial refugees, according to government estimates.

The report said the crackdown is an apparent attempt to dissuade any more refugees fleeing to Bangladesh ahead of elections in Myanmar later this year.

The police are "systematically rounding up, jailing or summarily expelling these unregistered refugees across the Burmese (Myanmar) border in flagrant violation of the country's human rights obligations," the report said.

Up to 10,000 unregistered Rohingya, many of whom have lived in Bangladesh for years, have moved to the makeshift camps since January, local police say.

The crackdown has "quarantined" the unregistered refugees in the camps, which surround the official UN-run facility, and the report said they were effectively "an open air prison."

"This confinement, coupled with the Bangladeshi government's refusal to allow unregistered refugees access to food aid, presents an untenable situation: refugees are being left to die from starvation," it said.

The PHR report follows two other reports, one by lobby group the Arakan Project and one by Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders), which also criticised the crackdown.

"The European Union is very concerned at the humanitarian situation. For those with no access to any food programme, the situation is grim," MEP Jean Lambert, who led a recent visit to the refugee camps, told AFP.

The Bangladeshi government on Sunday dismissed media reports relating to undocumented Myanmar nationals in Bangladesh as "baseless and malicious."

It views the Rohingya as economic migrants and maintains they must be repatriated.

"We are arresting illegal Rohingya and pushing them back over the border. It is an ongoing operation," said Rafiqul Islam, chief of the local police in Kutupalong, on the Myanmar border.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100309/wl_sthasia_afp/bangladeshmyanmarrohingyarefugeesrights_20100309103610






    © Copyright 2009 by Intellasia.net

    Top of Page


 
Burma's top military leader in India for talks
Korea's current account hits one-year high
Philippines overstocked with rice: government
Apple's iPhone 4 costs up to S$630 in Singapore
Oil hovers around $77 in Asia
LME eyes Taiwan warehouse, port says by end-2011
Japan's JFE to buy $1b stake in JSW Steel
BOJ's Kamezaki says Japan recovery not yet strong
'Malaysia in the forefront of Islamic banking'
Japan, China agree to speed up gas fields talks
Burma junta hands out road contracts to cronies
HK exports increase more than estimated 26.7pct, eighth monthly gain
Vietnam Banking and Finance
Advertising
 
Intellasia News Services
© 2009 All Rights Reserved
privacy policy : terms of use : contact