UNB, Cox’s Bazar :
Rohingya Muslims, not less than 1,300, who entered Bangladesh from India recently, are now staying at Ukhia upazila’s Balukhali transit point, said an official here on Friday.
“At least 1,300 Rohingays fled India and entered Bangladesh since the beginning of the new year. They’ve been kept at a transit point,” Saikat Biswas, an official at Inter Sector Coordination Group (ISCG), told UNB.
They (Rohingyas) will not be sent to Rohingya camp right now and they are now under the supervision of UNHCR, the UN refugee agency.
Talking to UNB, Refugee, Relief and Repatriation Commissioner (RRRC) Mohammad Abul Kalam said the exact number of Rohingyas arrived here from India will be determined through proper identification of those living in various places instead of the transit point.
On January 4, the UN refugee agency sought clarification from India over the return of Rohingya and regretted the India’s decision.
“UNHCR regrets India’s decision to repatriate a group of Rohingya to Myanmar, the second such return in three months,” said the UN refugee agency.
UNHCR said it continues to request access and seek clarification on the circumstances under which the return has taken place. A family of Rohingya asylum-seekers from Rakhine State, registered with UNHCR in India, was sent back to Myanmar after being detained in India’s Assam, where they had been serving a prison term since 2013 for illegal entry into India.
Despite repeated requests, UNHCR said, they did not receive any response from the authorities in India regarding requests for access to individuals in detention to ascertain their circumstances and assess the voluntariness of their decision to return.
This is the second such incident since October 2018, when India returned seven Rohingyas to Rakhine State in Myanmar, where conditions are not conducive to return, according to UNHCR. There are an estimated 18,000 Rohingya refugees and asylum-seekers registered with UNHCR in India, living across different locations, it said.
Rohingya Muslims, not less than 1,300, who entered Bangladesh from India recently, are now staying at Ukhia upazila’s Balukhali transit point, said an official here on Friday.
“At least 1,300 Rohingays fled India and entered Bangladesh since the beginning of the new year. They’ve been kept at a transit point,” Saikat Biswas, an official at Inter Sector Coordination Group (ISCG), told UNB.
They (Rohingyas) will not be sent to Rohingya camp right now and they are now under the supervision of UNHCR, the UN refugee agency.
Talking to UNB, Refugee, Relief and Repatriation Commissioner (RRRC) Mohammad Abul Kalam said the exact number of Rohingyas arrived here from India will be determined through proper identification of those living in various places instead of the transit point.
On January 4, the UN refugee agency sought clarification from India over the return of Rohingya and regretted the India’s decision.
“UNHCR regrets India’s decision to repatriate a group of Rohingya to Myanmar, the second such return in three months,” said the UN refugee agency.
UNHCR said it continues to request access and seek clarification on the circumstances under which the return has taken place. A family of Rohingya asylum-seekers from Rakhine State, registered with UNHCR in India, was sent back to Myanmar after being detained in India’s Assam, where they had been serving a prison term since 2013 for illegal entry into India.
Despite repeated requests, UNHCR said, they did not receive any response from the authorities in India regarding requests for access to individuals in detention to ascertain their circumstances and assess the voluntariness of their decision to return.
This is the second such incident since October 2018, when India returned seven Rohingyas to Rakhine State in Myanmar, where conditions are not conducive to return, according to UNHCR. There are an estimated 18,000 Rohingya refugees and asylum-seekers registered with UNHCR in India, living across different locations, it said.