Tag: Rohingya

  • Bangladesh President seeks effective Indian assistance over Rohingya crisis

    Bangladesh President seeks effective Indian assistance over Rohingya crisis

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    Dhaka: Newly-elected President Mohammed Shahabuddin on Tuesday urged India to take more effective steps in persuading Myanmar to take back the Rohingyas who were forced to take refuge in Bangladesh to evade persecution in the neighbouring country.

    “The President made the request when Indian High Commissioner to Bangladesh Pranay Kumar Verma met him at Bangabhaban,” a presidential palace spokesman told reporters here.

    Shahabuddin, 73, was sworn in as the 22nd president of Bangladesh on April 24. He succeeded Abdul Hamid whose tenure ended on April 23.

    MS Education Academy

    Verma paid a courtesy call on President Shahabuddin and conveyed to him warm greetings from President Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister Narendra Modi and discussed recent bilateral developments, the Indian High Commission in Dhaka tweeted.

    During the meeting, President Shahabuddin said that Bangladesh has sheltered the Muslim ethnic minority community for humanitarian reasons, and their prolonged stay is creating problems not only for the South Asian country but for the entire region, in an apparent reference to the escalating security risks including terrorism.

    Nearly one million Rohingya Muslims fled a crackdown by Myanmar’s military in 2017 in Rakhine state and are living in camps in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh.

    India has always called for the sustainable and speedy return of displaced persons to the Rakhine state of Myanmar. India has worked with Bangladesh and Myanmar to resolve this issue.

    Shahabuddin said Bangladesh attaches highest importance to its relations with India which is so closely linked by geographical proximity, shared history and sacrifices.

    He termed the existing bilateral ties as “strong and unique”.

    Shahabuddin, himself a Liberation War veteran, also recalled the training he received during his stay in India in 1971 during the independence struggle.

    He said the prime ministers of Bangladesh and India recently visited each others’ capitals and their “visits have opened a new chapter in the relationship between the two countries”.

    Shahabuddin said Bangladesh gave India access to Chittagong and Mongla seaport for transporting goods from the mainland to its north-eastern states. He expected the move would significantly cut time and cost needed to transport goods to India’s northeastern states and West Bengal and push regional connectivity in Bay of Bengal.

    He also noted that Dhaka and Delhi signed the ACMP (Chittagong and Mongla Port) agreement in 2018 and the deal would accelerate the socio-economic development of the two countries along with the increase in trade and commerce.

    The President hoped that the two countries’ unresolved issues, including the water distribution agreement, would be resolved soon through mutual cooperation and discussion.

    The high commissioner said India attaches highest importance to the relationship with Bangladesh.

    “Connectivity between the two countries has grown tremendously in the last one and a half decades. As a result, the people of both countries are enjoying its benefits,” Verma added.

    “The connectivity between the two countries has increased manifold over the last 15 years. People of both countries are enjoying this.”

    The Indian envoy informed his country’s appreciation for Bangladesh’s “Zero Tolerance Policy” against terrorism and said it resulted in stability in the region which is contributing positively to the economic development of both countries.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘I know how it feels to lose everything’: Rohingya refugees send aid to Turkey

    ‘I know how it feels to lose everything’: Rohingya refugees send aid to Turkey

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    With little to spare themselves, Rohingya refugees are among those in Bangladesh sending money, blankets and clothing to earthquake survivors in Turkey and Syria.

    The images of destroyed homes and grieving families resonated with Rohingya expelled by the Myanmar military, prompting online organisation and volunteers walking through the vast refugee camps in Bangladesh collecting donations.

    Reports have emerged of people selling their last piece of gold or donating what little cash they could, as Rohingya have rallied together and bought about 700 blankets and 200 jackets which will be delivered by Turkish development agency, Tika.

    “When we saw the families being saved from the rubble, parents who lost their loved ones, little babies who lost their parents, people struggling for food and shelter, we felt the same pain as our own situation in 2017 after our homes were burnt by the Myanmar military,” said Sahat Zia Hero, a Rohingya photographer and activist, who helped organise the donations.

    “We felt that it was a call for us to show our solidarity towards our brothers and sisters in Turkey and Syria and to share their pain with us.”

    He said many remembered that Turkish charities were some of the first to help the Rohingya as they fled the massacres in 2017.

    Close to a million Rohingya now live in Bangladesh, in the world’s largest refugee settlement, where they are unable to work or travel. Most were unable to bring many of their belongings from Myanmar; those who did mostly had to give them to boatmen in exchange for help crossing the border.

    Amina Khatoun, with some of the aid she bought by trading in a gold bracelet, kept for family emergencies.
    Amina Khatoun, with some of the aid she bought by trading in a gold bracelet, kept for family emergencies. Photograph: Ali Johar

    Amina Khatoun, 56, did have something to sell – a gold bracelet kept for emergencies. The money raised bought boxes of food, clothes, blankets and baby food.

    She lives in India, having fled violence in Myanmar. In 2018 she lost her shelter in New Delhi to a fire that razed an entire Rohingya refugee settlement, but the images of the earthquake moved her.

    My mother wanted send support for people in #Turkey. She didn’t had money so she sold her golden bangle that she saved for family emergency. She says, Turkey has been with Rohingya people whenever we faced emergency, we must stand with Turkey in this destitute time. @TurkEmbDelhi pic.twitter.com/cKQUd92MIW

    — Ali Johar (မောင်သိန်းရွှေ) (@mtsjohar) February 11, 2023

    “I know how it feels to lose everything. The people of Turkey stood with us whenever we faced an emergency; Turkey has built hospitals in the Bangladesh refugee camps,” she said.

    Her son, Ali Johar, a Rohingya activist, tweeted about his mother’s decision because he thought it was inspiring and might encourage other Rohingya to donate.

    Şevki Mert Bariş, Tika’s Bangladesh coordinator, said: “We are very happy to see the Bangladeshi people’s wholehearted support for us during this immense crisis, and it’s a great pleasure to see the donations from the Rohingya refugees.”

    Baris said up to eight tons of disaster relief is being sent from Bangladesh to Turkey alongside teams to help with the rescue efforts.

    The death toll from last week’s Turkey-Syria earthquakes is nearing 42,000. Turkish authorities say 36,187 people have been killed in the country. The Syrian government and the UN say more than 5,800 people have died in Syria.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )