Tokyo contemplates Rohingya resettlement in Japan: envoy

Tokyo contemplates Rohingya resettlement in Japan: envoy, Japanese Ambassador in Dhaka Ito Naoki has said his country was considering resettlement of some Rohingyas to Japan as Bangladesh tries to ease its load of over a million of refugees who fled their homes in Myanmar to evade persecution. “Japan has received the request about third-country resettlement (of Rohingyas) from your (Bangladesh) government. UNHCR here is also advising us to consider the possibility (to take Rohingyas to Japan),” the outgoing envoy told , ahead of leaving Dhaka to end his tenure.

 

Tokyo contemplates Rohingya resettlement in Japan: envoy

 

Tokyo contemplates Rohingya resettlement in Japan: envoy

Ito, however, said, approximately 300 Rohin-gyas were already living in a city 100 kilometers north of Tokyo but in line with a general policy, Japan was a bit cautious about foreign refugees, though there was precedence when his country provided such refuge. “So, there is a base of (Rohingya) community there (in Japan), but at the moment we are yet to come to any conclusion,” said the ambassador, who left Dhaka last night. Bangladesh Foreign minister Dr. AK Abdul Momen earlier said he had urged the United States, Britain, and Japan to share Bangladesh’s burden of a huge number of Rohingyas.

Momen told the newsmen that he suggested that each of these countries could take at least one lakh of the forcibly displaced people who fled their homes in Myanmar’s Rakhine state amid a military-backed racial crackdown in 2017.  Despite repeated insistence Myanmar so far did not take back a single Rohin-gya, defying their assurances. The United States has taken 24 Rohin-gyas last week in a symbolic response to Dhaka’s request while Momen called the development a “drop in the ocean”.

Diplomatic sources, however, said the US informed Dhaka it would take some Rohingyas from Bangladesh every year while shortlisting 62 of them for the first batch. “We know repatriation is the (only) solution to this issue and Myanmar is the only country which could provide the solution by allowing Rohin-gya refugees to go back in a safe, voluntary, and dignified manner,” the Japanese envoy said.

 

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He added Tokyo “seriously hopes” the Myanmar-Bangladesh consultation process would come to an end and repatriation will be started in the earliest possible time. It said Japan would continue to cooperate with the Bangladesh government and do its best to stabilize the situation in the Rakhine state and to improve the political situation in Myanmar but preferred to use the word “mediation”.

“We still have the prospect for repatriation. So, we will continue our cooperation toward your government, we will continue our funding towards UN agencies,” Ito said. He said Tokyo has increased the amount of funding for Rohingyas this year providing US$27.8 million for the displaced people and host community in Bangladesh, while the amount was US$ 5 million last year.

The ambassador said Tokyo’s focus on the crisis was manifested through this enhanced allocation despite the Russia-Ukraine War situation amid speculations that the Japanese overseas assistance could be diverted largely towards Ukraine. He said that Japan’s contribution to the UN refugee agency was increasing to help them handle the Rohin-gya crisis.

 

Tokyo contemplates Rohingya resettlement in Japan: envoy

“I think that is the clear demonstration that we are still focusing on this (Rohingya) crisis. We are still doing our best to alleviate the living condition of Rohingyas both inside Cox’s Bazar and Bhashanchar camps,” said the envoy. Since August 25 in 2017, Bangladesh has been hosting over 1.2 million forcefully displaced Rohin-gyas in Cox’s Bazar district and most of them arrived there after a military crackdown by Myanmar, which the UN called a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing” and other rights groups dubbed as “genocide”.

No Rohingya could go back home in the last five years and repatriation attempts failed twice due to a trust deficit among the forcibly displaced people about their safety and security in Rakhine state. The Bangladesh government has been urging the developed nations to take factions of Rohin-gyas from Bangladesh as third-country resettlement while repatriation attempts to Myanmar repeatedly failed.

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