Dubai Telegraph - Bangladesh revolution sparks new hopes among Rohingya

EUR -
AED 3.87034
AFN 72.060444
ALL 98.019455
AMD 410.266765
ANG 1.900638
AOA 962.050251
ARS 1056.643043
AUD 1.615844
AWG 1.896703
AZN 1.786176
BAM 1.954213
BBD 2.12935
BDT 126.027635
BGN 1.957691
BHD 0.397134
BIF 3114.840446
BMD 1.053724
BND 1.416336
BOB 7.303068
BRL 6.108757
BSD 1.054633
BTN 88.969735
BWP 14.407161
BYN 3.451264
BYR 20652.99284
BZD 2.125753
CAD 1.471015
CDF 3018.919992
CHF 0.930159
CLF 0.037188
CLP 1026.137258
CNY 7.625384
CNH 7.630401
COP 4632.792948
CRC 535.557376
CUC 1.053724
CUP 27.923689
CVE 110.175511
CZK 25.313581
DJF 187.795683
DKK 7.458754
DOP 63.60743
DZD 140.648561
EGP 52.504121
ERN 15.805862
ETB 131.48603
FJD 2.391113
FKP 0.831722
GBP 0.833854
GEL 2.887504
GGP 0.831722
GHS 16.741402
GIP 0.831722
GMD 74.814294
GNF 9090.48695
GTQ 8.141387
GYD 220.640787
HKD 8.20065
HNL 26.649974
HRK 7.516487
HTG 138.536161
HUF 410.958709
IDR 16783.9286
ILS 3.933773
IMP 0.831722
INR 89.026621
IQD 1381.47791
IRR 44353.893119
ISK 145.508981
JEP 0.831722
JMD 167.162638
JOD 0.747193
JPY 162.514809
KES 136.453404
KGS 91.148384
KHR 4255.50313
KMF 492.618494
KPW 948.351313
KRW 1473.169608
KWD 0.324062
KYD 0.878886
KZT 523.884481
LAK 23157.190833
LBP 94448.988541
LKR 306.83078
LRD 190.883146
LSL 19.128163
LTL 3.111373
LVL 0.637387
LYD 5.145772
MAD 10.535443
MDL 19.19341
MGA 4936.943171
MKD 61.551012
MMK 3422.454853
MNT 3580.554518
MOP 8.455232
MRU 41.923351
MUR 49.019201
MVR 16.290976
MWK 1828.697307
MXN 21.391464
MYR 4.698532
MZN 67.385453
NAD 19.128163
NGN 1770.878557
NIO 38.80811
NOK 11.629158
NPR 142.349352
NZD 1.793651
OMR 0.405689
PAB 1.054543
PEN 4.002149
PGK 4.245491
PHP 62.160768
PKR 293.17419
PLN 4.351563
PYG 8259.213166
QAR 3.845776
RON 4.977058
RSD 116.998172
RUB 106.007636
RWF 1454.304956
SAR 3.955997
SBD 8.804425
SCR 14.351716
SDG 633.818744
SEK 11.588231
SGD 1.41354
SHP 0.831722
SLE 23.78781
SLL 22096.073019
SOS 602.70474
SRD 37.333471
STD 21809.961916
SVC 9.227505
SYP 2647.513325
SZL 19.117291
THB 36.454665
TJS 11.231377
TMT 3.688034
TND 3.328796
TOP 2.467928
TRY 36.377681
TTD 7.1402
TWD 34.270795
TZS 2797.488951
UAH 43.486366
UGX 3891.838898
USD 1.053724
UYU 45.083382
UZS 13544.998228
VES 48.472967
VND 26784.086658
VUV 125.100246
WST 2.941567
XAF 655.418424
XAG 0.033794
XAU 0.000395
XCD 2.847742
XDR 0.802441
XOF 655.418424
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.351972
ZAR 19.117559
ZMK 9484.792878
ZMW 29.186017
ZWL 339.298738
  • RBGPF

    59.6900

    59.69

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    6.61

    -1.21%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    13.07

    -0.15%

  • AZN

    -0.6000

    63.2

    -0.95%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    45.11

    -0.4%

  • RIO

    -0.0400

    62.39

    -0.06%

  • GSK

    -0.1100

    33.35

    -0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.0836

    24.26

    -0.34%

  • BTI

    0.1500

    37.08

    +0.4%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    24.52

    -0.18%

  • NGG

    -0.3100

    63.27

    -0.49%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    8.94

    +0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.3100

    27

    -1.15%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    137.41

    -0.56%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.23

    -0.23%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    29.08

    -0.03%

Bangladesh revolution sparks new hopes among Rohingya
Bangladesh revolution sparks new hopes among Rohingya / Photo: Munir UZ ZAMAN - AFP

Bangladesh revolution sparks new hopes among Rohingya

Rohingya refugee Shonjida has endured years of boredom, misery and violence in Bangladesh -- but last month's overthrow of autocratic ex-premier Sheikh Hasina has given her fresh hope for the future.

Text size:

Around a million members of the stateless and persecuted Muslim minority live in a sprawling patchwork of Bangladeshi relief camps after fleeing violence in their homeland next door in Myanmar.

Hasina was lauded by the international community in 2017 for opening the borders to around 750,000 Rohingya who fled a Myanmar military crackdown that is now the subject of a UN genocide investigation.

But the years since have seen rampant malnutrition and regular gun battles in the camps, whose inhabitants hope that Hasina's ouster will bring renewed attention to their plight.

"We and our children live in fear at night because of the shootings," 42-year-old Shonjida, who goes by one name, told AFP.

Shonjida teaches at one of a few informal learning centres established for school-aged children in her camp, giving her an unsettling insight into the manifold problems facing her community.

The centres are able to cater to only a fraction of the camp's families, whose status as refugees shuts them out of Bangladeshi schools, universities and the local job market.

Many of her students are undernourished because declining international aid has forced successive ration cuts.

And they are terrified by the sound of rival militant groups battling for control of the camps, with more than 60 refugees killed in clashes so far this year, according to local media reports.

"We want peace and no more gunfire. We want our children to not be scared anymore," Shonjida said.

"Now that the new government is in power, we hope it will give us peace, support, food and safety."

- 'Island jail in the sea' -

Hasina was toppled last month in a student-led uprising that forced her to flee into exile in neighbouring India, moments before thousands of people stormed her palace in the capital Dhaka.

The revolution brought down the curtain on a 15-year rule marred by extrajudicial killings of her opponents, press restrictions and crackdowns on civil society.

Her decision to welcome Rohingya fleeing Myanmar won her some diplomatic reprieve from Washington and other Western capitals, who otherwise issued regular rebukes on abuses committed during her tenure.

But her government's struggles to accommodate the refugees in the following years were also the subject of regular criticism by rights groups.

It relocated at least 36,000 Rohingya to the previously uninhabited and cyclone-prone island of Bhashan Char to ease overcrowding in the camps.

Many of those sent there said they were forced to go against their will, with one refugee describing their new home to Human Rights Watch as "an island jail in the middle of the sea".

The desperate situation in the camps also prompted thousands to embark upon dangerous sea trips to find new refuge in Southeast Asian countries, with many drowning at sea.

- 'How can we go back?' -

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus, who is leading an interim government ahead of fresh elections, began his tenure last month by promising to continue supporting the Rohingya.

Many refugees said they had been encouraged by the initial weeks of the 84-year-old's administration.

"We saw on Facebook and YouTube that many of our community leaders had spoken with them and met with them," community leader Hamid Hossain, 48, told AFP. "I am more hopeful now."

But Yunus also said that Bangladesh needed "the sustained efforts of the international community" to look after the Rohingya.

This week he travelled to the United States and lobbied for more foreign aid for the group, with the State Department announcing nearly $200 million in additional funding after Yunus sat for a private meeting with President Joe Biden.

Yunus has also called for accelerated resettlement of Rohingya in third countries, with the prospect of refugees being safely returned to their original homes looking slimmer than ever.

The Rohingya endured decades of discrimination in Myanmar, where successive governments classified them as illegal immigrants despite their long history in the country.

Hasina's government and Myanmar made several abortive plans to establish a repatriation scheme, opposed by refugees who did not want to return home without guarantees of their safety and civic rights.

The security situation has worsened dramatically since last year. Rohingya-majority communities in Myanmar have been the site of intense clashes between the military and a rebel army battling the country's junta.

"There are killings there," refugee Mohammad Johar, 42, told AFP. "How can we go back?"

C.Masood--DT