60,000 more Rohingya flee Bangladesh amid escalating conflict in Burma
DHAKA, Bangladesh (AA) – Amid escalating conflict between the junta government and rebel Arakan Army in Burma, a fresh 60,000 Rohingya entered Bangladesh in the last two months, a Bangladeshi official said on Sunday.
Bangladesh is hosting over 1.2 million Rohingya in its southeastern Cox’s Bazar district. Most of the Rohingya Muslims fled Burma in August 2017 in a military crackdown.
The Rohingya infiltration has been facilitated by corruption on the Bangladesh-Burma border as some people help the Rohingya cross border in exchange for money.
Md. Touhid Hossain, foreign affairs adviser, told reporters about his visit to Bangkok, where an informal consultation meeting was held on Thursday last among six countries: Laos, Thailand, India, China, Burma, and Bangladesh.
“Our position in principle is not to allow any more Rohingya to enter. However, sometimes the situation becomes such that we have nothing more to do. In such a situation, we allowed 60,000 Rohingya to enter. It’s not that we officially let them in, they entered through different routes,” Hossain explained in Dhaka.
However, he said he believed that there would not be another wave of influx of Rohingya. “But we have to make arrangements to stop that wave, along with the international community,” he added.
The meeting was held under the chairmanship of Thai Foreign Minister Maris Sangiampongsa. Burma’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister U Than Swe was also present at the meeting.
Neighboring countries do not see any possibility of Burma returning to its previous state, Hossain added, noting that all the countries in the meeting asked Burma to resolve its internal problems through talks with all parties.
Citing the meeting with Swe, Hossain said: “I told him (Than Swe) that the Myanmar border is not under your control. The border has come under the control of non-state actors. As a state, we cannot get involved with non-state actors. So, they (Myanmar government) have to see in what way to solve the border and Rohingya problems.”