Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh protest repatriation move

Bangladesh has reached an agreement with Myanmar to send back the around 750,000 refugees who have arrived since October 2016 over the next two years, a process set to begin as early as next week. (AP)
Updated 19 January 2018
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Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh protest repatriation move

DHAKA: Hundreds of Rohingya refugees staged protests in Bangladesh Friday against plans to send them back to Myanmar, where a military crackdown last year sparked a mass exodus.
The refugees chanted slogans and held banners demanding citizenship and guarantees of security before they return to their home state of Rakhine in Myanmar.
The protest came ahead of a visit by UN special rapporteur Yanghee Lee to the camps in southeastern Bangladesh where around a million of the Muslim minority are now living.
Bangladesh has reached an agreement with Myanmar to send back the around 750,000 refugees who have arrived since October 2016 over the next two years, a process set to begin as early as next week.
But many Rohingya living in the crowded, unsanitary camps have said they do not want to return to Rakhine after fleeing atrocities including murder, rape and arson attacks on their homes.
Rights groups and the UN say any repatriation must be voluntary.
They have also expressed concerns about conditions in Myanmar, where many Rohingya settlements have been burned to the ground by soldiers and Buddhist mobs.
The government has said it is building temporary camps to accommodate the returnees, a prospect feared by Rohingya, said Mohibullah, a refugee and former teacher.
“We want safe zones in Arakan (Rakhine) before repatriation,” he said by phone from Cox’s Bazar, where the camps are located.
“We want a UN peacekeeping force in Arakan. We want fundamental rights and citizenship. We do not want repatriation without life guarantees,” Mohibullah said.
Police said they were unaware of the protests.
A Bangladesh official said around 6,500 Rohingya currently living in no man’s land between the two countries would be among the first to be repatriated.
The repatriation deal does not cover the estimated 200,000 Rohingya refugees who were living in Bangladesh prior to October 2016, driven out by previous rounds of communal violence and military operations.


Ukraine’s Zelensky says allies to provide new energy and military aid within 10 days

Updated 15 February 2026
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Ukraine’s Zelensky says allies to provide new energy and military aid within 10 days

  • Kyiv is aiming to rally support among partners as it struggles to fend off Russian battlefield advances and ‌air attacks

KYIV: Ukraine ‌has agreed new energy and military support packages with European allies ahead of ​the fourth anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion on February 24, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday.
Kyiv is aiming to rally support among partners as it struggles to fend off Russian battlefield advances and ‌air attacks on ‌its energy system ​while ‌under ⁠US ​pressure to negotiate ⁠peace.
“In Munich, we agreed with the leaders of the Berlin Format on specific packages of energy and military aid for Ukraine by February 24,” Zelensky wrote on ⁠X.
Zelensky said on Friday ‌after a ‌meeting of the so-called Berlin ​Format of about ‌a dozen European leaders in ‌Munich that he had hoped for new support, including air-defense missiles.
“I am grateful to our partners for their ‌readiness to help, and we count on all deliveries arriving promptly,” ⁠he ⁠added.
Russian attacks on major cities such as Kyiv have battered Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, plunging millions of residents into power outages of varying periods in freezing cold weather.
Zelensky added that Russia had launched around 1,300 attack drones, 1,200 guided aerial bombs and dozens ​of ballistic missiles at ​Ukraine over the past week alone.