(New York) – The Bangladesh
 government should immediately halt imminent relocations of Rohingya 
refugees to remote Bhasan Char island, Human Rights Watch said today. 
The authorities have reportedly prepared a list of 4,000 Rohingya refugees to be relocated, beginning with transfers to the port city of Chattogram on December 3, 2020.
The Bangladesh government should commit to a transparent relocation 
process, fully informed consent of transferred refugees and freedom of 
movement on and off the island, and heed the United Nations’ call for a 
prior independent technical and protection assessment.
“The Bangladesh government is actively reneging on its promise to the UN
 not to relocate any refugees to Bhasan Char island until humanitarian 
experts give a green light,” said Brad Adams,
 Asia director. “If the government were genuinely confident in the 
habitability of the island, they would be transparent and not hastily 
circumvent UN technical assessments.”
In a statement
 on December 2, the United Nations said that it had not been involved in
 preparation for this ransfer to Bhasan Char and that “any relocations 
to Bhasan Char should be preceded by comprehensive technical protection 
assessments,” reiterating that the UN stood ready to proceed with such 
assessments “if permitted by the Government.” European Union Ambassador 
Rensje Teerink said
 that the EU would not comment on relocation to Bhasan Char until the UN
 had been allowed to complete technical and humanitarian missions to the
 island. The UN also said that the government should respect commitments
 to ensure any relocation is voluntary.
Though the government claims that any relocation will be voluntary,
 Human Rights Watch recently spoke with 12 families who said their names
 were on the list, but that they had not willingly volunteered to 
relocate. Some refugees on the list have fled out of fear of forced 
relocation.
“I have no idea how my name appeared there, but I never voluntarily put 
my name on that list,” one refugee said. “I only learned I was on the 
list after the Camp-in-Charge [camp authority or CiC] called me to his 
office and told me. After that, I fled from my shelter. I am hearing now
 that the CiC volunteers and majhis (community leaders) are looking for me and my family. I am afraid that if they find me, they will force me to go.”
Another refugee said, “My name appeared on the list so now the CiC has 
threatened me, saying that since my name is there, I must go. He said, 
even if I die, they will take my body there [to Bhasan Char]. I don’t 
want to go to that island.”
The government has provided limited information to refugees about the 
actual conditions on the island, and there are some allegations that the
 authorities may have offered misleading information and incentives to 
move there. One refugee told Human Rights Watch that he put his name on 
the list because camp leaders told him that those on the list would be 
given priority to repatriate to Myanmar, and would be given 5,000 taka 
(US$59). But he has changed his mind about wanting to relocate since he 
heard about those currently detained on the island, and that they are 
being held in “prison-like facilities” and don’t have freedom of 
movement.
Some refugees said that they willingly volunteered to go to Bhasan Char because they were told by the majhis
 and CiC volunteers that they would be able to choose livelihood 
opportunities, such as fishing or farming, that they would have better 
access to health facilities, and that their children would get 
education.
However, the conditions on the island for the over 300 Rohingya refugees
 currently held there are poor, Human Rights Watch said. Those on the 
island say they are denied freedom of movement and have no access to 
sustainable livelihoods or education. Refugees on the island said 
Bangladesh authorities beat them when they went on hunger strike, pleading to be allowed to leave the island and return to the camps in Cox’s Bazar.
Healthcare workers in Cox’s Bazar and refugees who previously visited the island expressed serious concerns about the lack of adequate medical care on the island. One refugee who visited the island during a “go and see” visit in September
 said “if anyone becomes critically ill, the closest option is a 
hospital that is a minimum three-hour journey by boat,” which would be 
potentially impossible during monsoon season. He said some refugees on 
the island told him that a few days before the visit, one of the 
refugees had fallen unconscious, and the authorities had transported him
 by naval helicopter to Chattogram for medical care.
That incident indicates that the island likely does not have adequate 
healthcare facilities and that there is no sustainable plan in place for
 responding to medical emergencies, particularly if thousands of 
refugees are moved to the island, Human Rights Watch said. Some of the 
refugees who visited Bhasan Char also said that women and girls on the 
island do not have access to proper sanitary supplies to maintain safe 
menstrual hygiene.
“Donor governments engaged in the Rohingya crisis response such as the 
US, UK, Japan, Australia, and Canada should take a clear stand against 
this rash move to relocate Rohingya to Bhasan Char,” Adams said. 
“Decisions to move after the completion of technical assessments need to
 be voluntary and fully informed.”
https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/12/03/bangladesh-halt-rohingya-relocations-remote-island


 
 

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