MAUNGDAW, Myanmar: The transit camp in Myanmar’s Rakhine state stands ready to welcome back 150 Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh every day.
But on most days it lies completely empty, as members of the stateless minority dread returning to a place they were violently driven from by the military, and Myanmar makes little effort to reassure them things will be different this time.
“We have been ready to receive them since January, when we opened,” said Win Khaing, immigration director at Nga Khu Ra, standing in the desolate camp with reporters on Friday as part of a two-day government-chaperoned trip to the area.
The result is a stand-off, as Myanmar immigration officials wait in empty offices shuffling papers and arranging biometric equipment but with little to no work to do except greet visiting delegations and journalists.
Fewer than 200 Rohingya Muslims have been resettled in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state from the 700,000 who fled a violent army crackdown in August.
Rohingya women say they were raped by security forces, while witnesses described summary executions and a merciless campaign of violence that the UN has said amounts to ethnic cleansing.
Myanmar says it only targeted militants, although the military has admitted one instance of executing captured suspects.
Even the limited number of Rohingya who have returned have all done so under murky circumstances.
In April the government trumpeted the arrival of a Rohingya family of five, but it was later slammed as a PR stunt as it emerged they had come from a buffer area between the two countries that is technically part of Myanmar.
Local authorities nevertheless created a billboard with several large photos of the family near the border, heralding the “photo records of steps of repatriation.”
In recent months, Myanmar says dozens have been repatriated after crossing over from Bangladesh illegally.
It says others who tried to flee to Bangladesh by boat but accidentally washed up back in Myanmar have also been sent to live with relatives after being processed at the transit camp.
Bangladesh does not recognize these as legitimate returnees.
“The repatriation process has not begun,” Bangladesh refugee commissioner Mohammad Abul Kalam said.
Nine Rohingya purportedly released from prison in May after crossing back over illegally were brought by Myanmar officials to meet journalists on Friday.
But cracks quickly emerged in the story, with some saying they had never even been to Bangladesh and were “repatriated” from prison in Myanmar.
“We were arrested in November last year (in Myanmar) and sentenced to four years imprisonment each under the immigration act,” said Yar Sein, 35, a farmer and father-of-four.
“We were arrested from school and accused of coming from Bangladesh. We haven’t been to Bangladesh.”
The prolonged delays in repatriation have also strained relations with Bangladesh, which plans to send a protest note after a 10-year-old Rohingya boy in the buffer zone was struck by a bullet from the Myanmar side on Thursday.
Myanmar says it fired at people attempting to damage the border fence.
As the two countries blame each other for the delay, Myanmar has embarked on what it says is a massive development project in northern Rakhine, bulldozing Rohingya towns and remaking the entire landscape in the name of reconstruction.
The UN has said conditions in Rakhine are not ripe for a safe, voluntary and dignified repatriation, but signed an agreement with Myanmar to assess conditions on the ground to help refugees make an informed decision.
Myanmar has faced global condemnation for its treatment of the Rohingya, and Amnesty International said this week that several senior military figures should be tried for crimes against humanity.
A US Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report Thursday downgraded Myanmar for failing to protect Rohingya Muslims fleeing the crackdown and leaving them vulnerable to exploitation and trafficking rings.
The Rohingya are loathed by many in Myanmar, where they were stripped of citizenship and branded illegal immigrants from Bangladesh despite calling Rakhine their homeland.
Min Aung Hlaing, the army chief, said last month that Rohingya have nothing to fear as long as they stay in places “designated” for them, raising concerns that they would be placed back into the apartheid-like conditions they escaped.
Ye Htoo, district administrator in Maungdaw — the epicenter of violence in the western state — told reporters Myanmar is “planning to create a good environment for them to stay if they come back.”
Still, he admitted, “there is no one” at the camps.
Local residents have also spoken of not being willing to coexist alongside their former neighbors, whom many associate with a Rohingya militant group that attacked police posts.
Khin Soe, a 30-year-old Buddhist ethnic Rakhine woman from Inn Din village, said they are still afraid.
“If the government really plans to relocate them here again, we are leaving this place.”
Myanmar transit camps sit empty as Rohingya fear return
Myanmar transit camps sit empty as Rohingya fear return
- Fewer than 200 Rohingya Muslims have been resettled in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state from the 700,000 who fled a violent army crackdown in August
- Even the limited number of Rohingya who have returned have all done so under murky circumstances
Greece seeks to toughen punishment for migrant smuggling
ATHENS: Greece’s migration ministry on Saturday said it had submitted a new bill to parliament aimed at toughening penalties for migrant trafficking, including life sentences.
Greece was the main entry point into Europe for Syrian refugees at the height of Europe’s migration crisis in 2015.
There are several legal proceedings underway against aid workers and migrants accused of being people smugglers.
“Penalties for the illegal trafficking of migrants will be toughened at all levels,” the ministry said in a statement.
Sentences of up to life imprisonment are envisaged for smugglers, and migrants convicted of offenses may be directly expelled, it said.
Assistance provided to irregular migrants by migrants with regular status will also be criminalized, according to the proposals.
Migration Minister Thanos Plevris is a former member of a far-right party.
Penalties against NGO members prosecuted for migrant trafficking are also to be beefed up with prison sentences, the ministry said, adding that parliament will examine the bill next week.
In a joint statement, 56 NGOs, including the Greek branches of Doctors of the World and Doctors Without Borders, called for the immediate withdrawal of several articles that reclassify certain offenses as crimes, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and fines of tens of thousands of euros when a member of an organization is prosecuted.
They also decry the exorbitant power granted to the ministry, which can decide to remove an organization from the registry and end its work solely on the basis of charges brought against one of its members, without a conviction.
On January 15, 24 aid workers, including Sarah Mardini, a Syrian who, together with her Olympic swimmer sister inspired the 2022 film “The Swimmers,” were acquitted by a court on the island of Lesbos.
Charged with “forming a criminal organization” and “illegally facilitating the entry into Greece of foreign nationals from third countries,” they had faced up to 20 years in prison.
With this new law, the migration ministry aims to promote legal migration by easing hiring procedures for workers from third countries, creating a new visa for employees of high-tech companies, and issuing residence permits to students from third-world countries for the duration of their studies.
For asylum seekers and refugees, vocational training programs in sectors facing labor shortages, such as construction, agriculture, and tourism, are being introduced to support their entry into the job market.
Greece was the main entry point into Europe for Syrian refugees at the height of Europe’s migration crisis in 2015.
There are several legal proceedings underway against aid workers and migrants accused of being people smugglers.
“Penalties for the illegal trafficking of migrants will be toughened at all levels,” the ministry said in a statement.
Sentences of up to life imprisonment are envisaged for smugglers, and migrants convicted of offenses may be directly expelled, it said.
Assistance provided to irregular migrants by migrants with regular status will also be criminalized, according to the proposals.
Migration Minister Thanos Plevris is a former member of a far-right party.
Penalties against NGO members prosecuted for migrant trafficking are also to be beefed up with prison sentences, the ministry said, adding that parliament will examine the bill next week.
In a joint statement, 56 NGOs, including the Greek branches of Doctors of the World and Doctors Without Borders, called for the immediate withdrawal of several articles that reclassify certain offenses as crimes, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and fines of tens of thousands of euros when a member of an organization is prosecuted.
They also decry the exorbitant power granted to the ministry, which can decide to remove an organization from the registry and end its work solely on the basis of charges brought against one of its members, without a conviction.
On January 15, 24 aid workers, including Sarah Mardini, a Syrian who, together with her Olympic swimmer sister inspired the 2022 film “The Swimmers,” were acquitted by a court on the island of Lesbos.
Charged with “forming a criminal organization” and “illegally facilitating the entry into Greece of foreign nationals from third countries,” they had faced up to 20 years in prison.
With this new law, the migration ministry aims to promote legal migration by easing hiring procedures for workers from third countries, creating a new visa for employees of high-tech companies, and issuing residence permits to students from third-world countries for the duration of their studies.
For asylum seekers and refugees, vocational training programs in sectors facing labor shortages, such as construction, agriculture, and tourism, are being introduced to support their entry into the job market.
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