'Bangladesh govt keeping vigil on Rohingya refugees'
BY Agencies19 Sep 2017 5:17 PM GMT
Agencies19 Sep 2017 5:17 PM GMT
Cox Bazar: The Bangladesh government was keeping an eye on the Rohingya refugees and getting them registered to ensure that militants did not enter the country, H T Imam, Political Adviser to Bangladesh Prime minister Sheikh Hasina, said on Tuesday.
"All our agencies are keeping a close watch on the Rohingya refugees staying in Bangladesh. The government is getting them registered with all the relevant details to ensure that no militants enter Bangladesh," he told reporters.
Stating that Bangladesh had a "zero tolerance" policy towards militants, Imam said, "We will not allow any terrorist group to use the soil of Bangladesh to operate against any of our friends and neighbours, including India and Myanmar."
He added that the Bangladesh government would take prompt action if there was any report of militants of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) trying to enter the country.
Imam, however, said so far, there was no report of the Rohingya refugees trying to create a ruckus in Bangladesh.
"Our position has been that these (Rohingya) people, who have taken refuge in Bangladesh, are staying in various camps. Those camps have to be closed and we need to send them back," he said.
On Monday, Bangladesh Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Mohammed Shahriar Alam had said here that the Rohingya crisis was "both a humanitarian and a security" issue. He had also not ruled out the possibility of links between foreign terror groups and the ARSA.
Alam had also described the Rohingya Muslims as a "security threat to Bangladesh".
There had been incidents in the past and that was why the Bangladesh government had started getting the Rohingya population registered, he had said.
Facing a big influx of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, Bangladesh has called on the international community to put pressure on Myanmar to address the exodus.
According to a UN estimate, over 3,79,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled the Rakhine state in northern Myanmar and entered Bangladesh since August 25. According to media reports, the violence began when Rohingya militants attacked police posts in Rakhine. The Rohingya people — most of them Muslims — have accused the Myanmar military and Buddhists of Rakhine of responding with a brutal campaign against them.
Meanwhile, Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi condemned on Tuesday human rights violations in Rakhine state and said violators would be brought to book, but she did not address UN accusations of a campaign of ethnic cleansing by the military.
The Nobel Peace laureate's remarks came in her first address to the nation since attacks by Rohingya Muslim insurgents on Aug. 25 sparked a military response that has forced 421,000 Rohingya Muslims into neighbouring Bangladesh.
Western diplomats and aid officials, hoping for an unequivocal condemnation of violence and hate speech, welcomed the tone of Suu Kyi's message, but some doubted if she had done enough to deflect global criticism.
Human rights group Amnesty International described her speech as "little more than a mix of untruths and victim-blaming", saying she and her government were "burying their heads in the sand" for ignoring the army's role in the violence.
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