Bangladesh says stopping Rohingya militants, allowing ‘helpless’ refugees

A Rohingya refugee girl carries drinking water in a jar at Kutupalang Unregistered Refugee Camp, in Cox Bazar on Thursday. (Reuters)
Updated 09 February 2017
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Bangladesh says stopping Rohingya militants, allowing ‘helpless’ refugees

DHAKA: Bangladesh is working with Myanmar security forces to stop Rohingya Muslim militants crossing their shared border, but will continue to allow women, children and the elderly to seek shelter there, a top government official said.
Around 69,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh to escape violence in Buddhist majority Myanmar since October, straining relations between the two neighbors who both see the stateless Muslim minority as the other nation’s problem.
Despite those tensions, H.T. Imam, political adviser to Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, said Bangladesh had handed over two Rohingya militants caught sneaking into its territory in October, and was continuing to cooperate with Myanmar to prevent more from doing so.
“Those who are absolutely helpless — women with children and the elderly — we will give them temporary shelter,” Imam said in an interview on Wednesday. “We are doing this at a heavy cost. It is a crisis that has been forced on us. They are citizens of Myanmar and must be taken back.”
About 1.1 million Rohingya Muslims live in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, where they face restrictions on their movements and are denied citizenship. Many Myanmar Buddhists regard them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
Myanmar’s military launched what it describes as a counterinsurgency operation in northwestern Rakhine in October. A UN report last week said soldiers have committed mass killings, rapes and arson.
Bangladesh is already host to hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees, and says the latest influx has strained its limited resources.
Officials, including Imam and Foreign Minister A.H. Mahmood Ali, met diplomats from countries including the US, Saudi Arabia and Myanmar in Dhaka on Sunday to address the crisis.
Bangladesh is seeking funds for its much-criticized plan to relocate new and old refugees from Myanmar to an isolated and undeveloped island in the Bay of Bengal called Thengar Char — which floods at high tide. They are currently sheltered in the coastal district of Cox’s Bazar.
“The foreign minister requested for international help and also for taking the Rohingya population,” Imam said. “Bangladesh has a serious political, economic and financial problem because of the influx.”
Underscoring Bangladesh’s commitment to press ahead with the island plan, the prime minister’s military secretary, Major Gen. Mia Mohammad Zainul Abedin, visited Thengar Char on Wednesday.
The general asked the local administration to set up a helipad, jetty, deep tube well for drinking water and other infrastructure to make the island liveable, a local official said.
New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) has urged Bangladesh to drop the island plan, which it called “cruel and unworkable.”
The crisis erupt after nine Myanmar police officers were killed in coordinated attacks on border posts on Oct. 9.
Refugees started to trickle across the border soon after that, but many were initially turned back by Bangladeshi border guards. Imam said they were later allowed to come in after Prime Minister Hasina intervened on humanitarian grounds and at the request of the international community.


Ukraine’s Zelensky: We have backed US peace proposals to get a deal done

Updated 4 sec ago
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Ukraine’s Zelensky: We have backed US peace proposals to get a deal done

  • “The tactic we chose is for the Americans not to think that we want to continue the war,” Zelensky ‌told The Atlantic

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv ‌had sought to back US peace proposals to end the war with Russia as President Donald Trump seeks to resolve the conflict before ​November mid-term elections.
Zelensky, in an interview published by The Atlantic on Thursday, said Kyiv was willing to hold both a presidential election and a referendum on a deal, but would not settle for an accord that was detrimental to Ukraine’s interests.
“The tactic we chose is for the Americans not to think that we want to continue the war,” Zelensky ‌told the ‌US-based publication. “That’s why we started supporting their ​proposals in ‌any ⁠format ​that speeds ⁠things along.”
He said Ukraine was “not afraid of anything. Are we ready for elections? We’re ready. Are we ready for a referendum? We’re ready.”
Zelensky has sought to build good relations with Washington since an Oval Office meeting in February 2025 descended into a shouting match with Trump and US Vice President JD ⁠Vance.
But he said he had rejected a ‌proposal, reported this week by the ‌Financial Times, to announce the votes ​on February 24, the fourth ‌anniversary of Russia’s invasion. A ceasefire and proposed US security ‌guarantees against a future invasion had not yet been settled, he said.
“No one is clinging to power,” The Atlantic quoted him as saying. “I am ready for elections. But for that we need security, guarantees ‌of security, a ceasefire.”
And he added: “I don’t think we should put a bad deal ⁠up for a ⁠referendum.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Zelensky is not a legitimate negotiating partner because he has not faced election since coming to power in 2019.
Zelensky has said in recent weeks that a document on security guarantees for Ukraine is all but ready to be signed.
But, in his remarks, he acknowledged that details remained unresolved, including whether the US would be willing to shoot down incoming missiles over Ukraine if Russia were to violate the peace.
“This hasn’t been fixed ​yet,” Zelensky said. “We have raised ​it, and we will continue to raise these questions...We need all of this to be written out.”