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Cultural Potpourri: A visit to the Rohingyas refugee camp

One of the heart-tugging highlights of my Bangladesh experience was visiting the Rohingyas refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar.  The hour-long flight from Dhaka, the capital city of Bangladesh, to Cox’s Bazar was alright as the huge Nigerian delegate seated beside me in the plane was asleep most of the time which prevented me from moving until I had to go to the comfort room.  Cox’s Bazar is a rural city, fishing port, not so developed tourism center, and district headquarter in southeast Bangladesh.  The tourist attraction of Cox’s Bazar is its longest natural sea beach in the world with an unbroken length of 120 km.  Cox’s Bazar derives its name from Capt. Hiram Cox, an officer of the British East India Company who was appointed as Superintendent of Palongkee (old name of Cox’s Bazar) during the colonial period in the 18th century.

Poster of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner

The Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh are the Rohingya refugees from Myanmar (formerly Burma).  For several years, the Rohingyas have experienced ethnic and religious persecution in Myanmar’s borders.  Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya boat people have fled to Southeast Asian countries namely Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines.  But majority of Rohingyas have fled to Bangladesh since the early ‘90s where there are two official refugee camps.  Rohingyas are considered the most persecuted people in the world.

An aerial view of the Rohingyas Refugee Camp in Cox’s Bazar

It was a two-hour truly bumpy ride in the midst of a vast rural scenery to get to the Rohingya refugee camp from the Royal Tulip Sea Pearl Beach Resort Hotel where we were billeted.  What a contrast to the Rohingyas refugee camp’s flimsy dwellings as the luxurious and spacious hotel room I was assigned had a magnificent endless sea view on the west and lush green hills rising on the east side.

Flimsy dwellings at the refugee camp

More than 2,000 hectares of forest have been deforested to make way for campsites after the arrival of 750,000 Rohingyas who fled Myanmar’s Rakhine State to Bangladesh since August 2017.  It was the time when premeditated massacres were carried out against the Rohingyas escalated.  Bangladesh is presently temporary home to 1.1 million stateless Rohingya people.  Overcrowding (half a square meter per refugee according to a report) and lack of access to basic services like education, food, clean water, good sanitation best describe the present Rohingya Refugee Camp we visited.  It only reminded me of our squatter communities.

Rohingya children’s uncertain future

“We have been tortured, killed, raped, and our houses and properties burned.  We want our Myanmar citizenship and our ID cards saying we are Rohingyas.  But conditions in Myanmar as of the present are not right for our safe return,” said a desperate leader representing the Rohingyas during our meeting with Deputy Sec. Mizanur Rahman of the Ministry of Disaster Management and Relief.  Bangladesh and Myanmar agreed to start repatriating the first group of Rohingyas on November 15, 2018, but it was stopped “due to the absence of conducive environment in their place of origin in Rakhine.”  Other Rohingya speakers voiced out their problems angrily in loud voices.  I could not stop thinking how people could be so cruel, so inhuman to commit genocide.

Rohingya women speak about rape and torture

Over the last years, tens of thousands of trees have been cut down to set up camps for the refugees, make furniture and cook food.  The long term consequences are more environmental than financial according to reports made by the Cox’s Bazar Forest Department.  The campsite also blocked the only corridor used by the endangered Asian elephant and trapped them thus resulting in human-elephant conflict and casualties.  What remains of the elephant habitat is under severe pressure from uncontrolled firewood collection in the forest.  Soil erosion and landslides are already common in the area thus affecting water resources, irrigation, and groundwater reserves.  According to Sharif Ahmed Mukul, the Director at the Applied Ecology and Conservation Research Lab of the Independent University of Bangladesh, “Local biodiversity, including marine resources as the Rohingya people are now frequently visiting the Bay of Bengal for fishing and other aquatic resource collection, acoustic environment, and air quality are being degraded at an unprecedented rate.”

Rohingya leaders talk on genocide and ethnic cleansing in Myanmar

Sharif Ahmed Mukul believes that the major long term strategy is to improve the environmental conditions in the Cox’s Bazar.  Forest and landscape restorations, both inside and outside the refugee camp, using local and native tree species must be done.  The Bangladesh government has already instructed all organizations involved in refugee management to take up sustainable projects to help restore the forest.

It is truly admirable of the Bangladesh government to be accepting and supporting the vast number of displaced Rohingyas from Myanmar.  Truly, it is a highly respectable humanitarian decision and effort.  As one reporter commented, “Bangladesh’s hosting of Rohingya refugees is unequalled in the current context of global anti-immigration sentiment.”

A traditional boat found along Cox Bazar’s longest sea in the world

But the question remains, what does the future hold for the Rohingyas whose population is increasing in the refugee camps of Bangladesh, the host country that is, in itself, already one of the most densely populated on planet earth.

 

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