Home Neighbours Bangladesh Bangladesh Running Out Of Resources For Rohingya Refugees, Yunus Warns

Bangladesh Running Out Of Resources For Rohingya Refugees, Yunus Warns

The development marked eight years since over 700,000 Rohingya arrived within days, transforming Bangladesh's coastal town of Cox’s Bazar into the world’s largest refugee settlement.
Rohingya refugees are reflected in rainwater along an embankment next to paddy fields after fleeing from Myanmar into Palang Khali, near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, November 2, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

Bangladesh has no capacity to allocate any additional resources for its 1.3 million Rohingya refugees, Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus said on Monday, calling on the international community to work toward establishing a sustainable resolution to the crisis.

Children make up half the 1.3 million Rohingya refugees now living in Bangladesh, most of whom fled a brutal 2017 military crackdown in Buddhist-majority Myanmar that U.N. investigators called a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing”.

Hosting the refugees has put a huge strain on Bangladesh, in areas from its economy and environment to governance, said Nobel peace laureate Yunus, the South Asian nation’s de facto prime minister.

“We don’t foresee any scope whatsoever for further mobilisation of resources from domestic sources, given our numerous challenges,” Yunus said in a speech.

He called for the international community to draft a practical roadmap for their return home.

“The Rohingya issue and its sustainable resolution must be kept alive on the global agenda, as they need our support until they return home.”

Rohingya Crisis

Yunus’ comments marked the eighth anniversary since more than 700,000 Rohingya arrived within a matter of days, turning the area around the southeastern coastal town of Cox’s Bazar into the world’s largest refugee settlement.

Tens of thousands of them held rallies on Monday in camps there, carrying banners and posters that proclaimed, “No more refugee life”, “Stop Genocide” and “Repatriation the ultimate solution”.

In Bangladesh, the refugees live in crammed bamboo shelters amid dwindling aid, closed schools and little hope of return.

Over the past year, another 150,000 have arrived from Myanmar’s western Rakhine state, where fighting has escalated between junta troops and the Arakan Army, an ethnic militia drawn largely from the Buddhist majority.

The Myanmar military calls the operation against the Rohingya a legitimate counter-terrorism campaign in response to attacks by Muslim militants, not a planned programme of ethnic cleansing.

Attempts to begin their return home in 2018 and 2019 failed as the refugees, fearing prosecution, refused to go back.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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