Seven years of Rohingya exodus: Fears of lost generation, fading hope for return

Special Rohingya children refugees wait, squashed against each other, to receive food handouts distributed to children and women at a refugee camp in Bangladesh. (File/AP)
Rohingya children refugees wait, squashed against each other, to receive food handouts distributed to children and women at a refugee camp in Bangladesh. (File/AP)
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Updated 25 August 2024

Seven years of Rohingya exodus: Fears of lost generation, fading hope for return

Rohingya children refugees wait, squashed against each other, to receive food handouts distributed to children and women.
  • Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh have no working opportunities, diminishing hope for repatriation
  • There is a ‘big lack’ of collective international effort to solve Rohingya crisis, expert says

DHAKA: Seven years after a brutal military crackdown in Myanmar forced Hasina Begum and her family to flee across the border to Bangladesh, life has been nothing but a struggle.

The mother of four was one of more than 730,000 Rohingya who fled to Bangladesh in August 2017 to escape atrocities and persecution that according to the UN have amounted to genocide. Sunday, known as “Rohingya Genocide Day,” marked the anniversary of their mass exodus.

“There is no way out of the agony. Here, we have been living a life that is full of struggle, uncertainty, insecurity, and with no hope for the future,” Begum told Arab News.

Though the Rohingya have faced decades of systematic discrimination and persecution in the majority-Buddhist country, life in Bangladesh’s refugee camps was “not a dignified one,” she said.

The Rohingya, which the UN described as “one of the world’s most persecuted minorities,” were not recognized as an indigenous ethnic group in Myanmar, which denies them the right to claim citizenship.

Begum is now among the 1 million refugees living in the overcrowded camps in Cox’s Bazar, which has turned into the world’s largest refugee settlement and where humanitarian aid has dwindled.

“My children are suffering from malnutrition as I can’t provide them with sufficient food. The exorbitant price of daily essentials has put us in an extremely hard situation, and it’s getting tougher day by day,” she said.

International aid for the Rohingya has been dropping since 2020, with the World Food Program reducing food assistance for the refugees since last year after its pleas for donations were not met, deepening food insecurity in the camps.

Yet food was just one of Begum’s many worries, as Rohingya refugees struggle with no working opportunities, a lack of education and proper healthcare, and diminishing hope for a dignified repatriation.
Though the return of the Rohingya to Myanmar has been on the agenda for years, a UN-backed repatriation process has yet to take off despite pressure from Bangladesh and international organizations.

“We have witnessed many discussions in the UN and other regional platforms, but our fates remain the same,” Begum said.

“The superpowers should have done something effective to ensure our repatriation with dignity and rights. But it seems that the major players in the global platforms are driven by their own interests and agendas. Sometimes, it seems to me that we are just like dolls or tools at the whims of superpowers.”

Countries like the US often spoke about the protection of human rights, but Begum said such talks did not translate into real action for the Rohingya.

“In our case, we didn’t see much effort to protect our rights. It’s a shameful situation and seems like a double standard.”

In recent years, many Rohingya have made extremely dangerous voyages across the Indian Ocean to seek better lives, hoping to reach countries like Malaysia or Indonesia. However, the UN estimates that as many as one in eight people die or disappear in the attempt.

The international community “must do more” for his people, said Rohingya rights activist Mohammed Rezuwan Khan.

“The lack of international pressure and failure to take concrete action against the Myanmar junta and Arakan Army only adds to our sufferings and seems to be giving the perpetrators chances to continue their atrocities,” Khan, who along with his family survived the 2017 genocide, told Arab News.

Hundreds of Rohingya have reportedly been killed trying to flee ongoing fighting between Myanmar’s military government and the Arakan Army, an armed ethnic rebel group in Rakhine State, the center location of the 2017 violence.

“Repatriation seems distant, and I fear that even if it happens, the conditions in Myanmar will still not be safe or dignified for the Rohingya, as the Arakan Army and the military junta intensify their targets against the Rohingya,” Khan said.

On Friday, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk was among those who raised concerns over the deteriorating situation in Rakhine, which Amnesty International said was “disturbingly familiar” to the violence against the Rohingya seven years ago.

Yet since 2017, the world’s most powerful countries, like the US, China and Japan, have not put maximum pressure on Myanmar authorities, said Prof. Imtiaz Ahmed, international relations expert and a former lecturer at Dhaka University.

“Since all these countries are members of the UN, (the UN) could have initiated a strong united effort. But that’s not happening here,” Ahmed said.

“A collective effort from the international community is much needed. Just talking won’t do it anymore.”

The recent fighting in Rakhine has brought a new layer to the crisis, but also an opportunity for the international community to “take a chance” at this moment, Ahmed said.

“We have to keep in mind that every crisis creates some opportunities also. If we sit idle to let the crisis over, then there will not be any solution. There is no doubt that there is a big lack of collective effort at the international level.”

In Bangladesh, where hosting Rohingya refugees is costing the government about $1.2 billion per year, international support to ensure a dignified repatriation to Myanmar and a dignified life in waiting was deemed crucial.

“International community should engage more with Myanmar for repatriating the Rohingya, and until then, they should continue to provide support to Bangladesh,” said Mizanur Rahman, Bangladesh’s refugee relief and repatriation commissioner in Cox’s Bazar.

The Rohingya are “severely affected” by “the slow process of resolving the crisis,” which leaves them in “deep, frustrating situations,” he told Arab News.

“If they can’t return to their homeland … many Rohingya are now thinking that the future of their next generation is now at real stake.”


Ukraine appoints new prosecutor general

Updated 5 sec ago

Ukraine appoints new prosecutor general

Ukraine appoints new prosecutor general
Kravchenko, 35, is now head of the state tax administration
The prosecutor general’s post has remained vacant since October

KYIV: Ukraine’s parliament on Tuesday appointed Ruslan Kravchenko, one of the key investigators of alleged Russian war crimes during the occupation of the Kyiv region in 2022, as prosecutor general.

Kravchenko, 35, is now head of the state tax administration, and before that chaired the Kyiv region military administration.

He was involved in the recording and prosecuting of alleged Russian atrocities in the town of Bucha, which was occupied for 33 days in the early stages of Moscow’s full-scale invasion. Russia denies accusations of numerous executions, rapes and torture during the occupation.

Kravсhenko was also a prosecutor in Ukraine’s ousted President Viktor Yanukovych’s treason case.

The prosecutor general’s post has remained vacant since October, after Andriy Kostin resigned following a scandal around officials receiving fake disability status and avoiding military service.

Pope Leo to escape Rome’s summer heat with July stay at Castel Gandolfo

Pope Leo to escape Rome’s summer heat with July stay at Castel Gandolfo
Updated 3 min 43 sec ago

Pope Leo to escape Rome’s summer heat with July stay at Castel Gandolfo

Pope Leo to escape Rome’s summer heat with July stay at Castel Gandolfo
  • The pontiff will spend July 6 to 20 about an hour’s drive south in Castel Gandolfo, the Vatican said
  • All of Leo’s public and private audiences have been suspended from July 2 through July 23

VATICAN CITY: As temperatures in Rome swelter this month, reaching more than 35 degrees Celsius (95°F) under the hot Mediterranean sun, Pope Leo has decided to leave town.

The pontiff will spend July 6 to 20 about an hour’s drive south in Castel Gandolfo, a small hamlet on Lake Albano, the Vatican said on Tuesday.

Leo, elected pope on May 8 to replace the late Pope Francis, will also return to the lakeshore for at least one weekend in August, it said.

All of Leo’s public and private audiences have been suspended from July 2 through July 23, the Vatican said, as was usual under Francis, to allow the pontiff a period of rest. They will restart on July 30.

By going to Castel Gandolfo, Leo is restarting a summer tradition that was broken by Francis.

Dozens of popes over centuries have spent the summer months at Lake Albano, where temperatures are usually about ten degrees cooler than Rome, but Francis preferred to stay in his air-conditioned Vatican residence.

The Vatican has owned a papal palace and surrounding grounds in Castel Gandolfo since 1596. Spanning 55 hectares, the property includes official apartments, elaborate Renaissance-style gardens, a forest and a working dairy farm.

Francis, who shunned most of the trappings of the papacy, had the official papal palace turned into a museum.

Vatican spokesperson Matteo Bruni told Reuters the pope would not stay at the palace, which will remain a museum, and will instead stay on another Vatican property.

Leo will return to Castel Gandolfo for the weekend of August 15 to 17.

August 15, a Catholic feast day to celebrate Mary, the Mother of God, is an Italian public holiday. Many Italians spend that day, and much of August, at the beach.


Black boxes from India plane crash under study to ascertain cause of the disaster that killed 270

Black boxes from India plane crash under study to ascertain cause of the disaster that killed 270
Updated 17 June 2025

Black boxes from India plane crash under study to ascertain cause of the disaster that killed 270

Black boxes from India plane crash under study to ascertain cause of the disaster that killed 270
  • A former pilot and an aviation expert said the recovery of the flight data and cockpit voice recorders, or black boxes, are crucial to piece together the sequence of events

NEW DELHI: Investigators in India are studying the black boxes of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner after recovering them from the aircraft wreckage to ascertain the cause of last week’s plane crash that left at least 270 people dead.
The black boxes will provide cockpit conversations and data related to the plane’s engine and control settings to investigators and help them in determining the cause of the crash.
The London-bound Air India aircraft, a Boeing 787 Dreamliner, crashed on a medical college hostel soon after taking off from the western city of Ahmedabad. Only one passenger survived the crash, while 241 people on board and 29 on the ground were killed in one of India’s worst aviation disaster in decades.
Experts from India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau are probing the crash with assistance from the UK, the US and officials from Boeing.
Black box data is crucial
Amit Singh, a former pilot and an aviation expert, said the recovery of the flight data and cockpit voice recorders, or black boxes, are crucial to piece together the sequence of events.
The cockpit voice recorder records pilots’ conversation, emergency alarms and any distress signal made before a crash. The plane’s digital flight data recorder stores information related to engine and control settings. Both devices are designed to survive a crash.
“The data will reveal everything,” Singh said, adding that the technical details could be corroborated by the cockpit voice recorder that would help investigators know of any communication between air traffic control and the pilots.
India’s aviation regulatory body has said the aircraft made a mayday call before the crash.
Singh said the investigating authorities will scan CCTV footage of the nearby area and speak with witnesses to get to the root cause of the crash.
Additionally, Singh said, the investigators will also study the pilot training records, total load of the aircraft, thrust issues related to the plane’s engine, as well as its worthiness in terms of past performances and any previously reported issues.
Investigation into the crash could take time
Aurobindo Handa, former director general of India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, said the investigators across the world follow a standard UN-prescribed Manual of Accident Investigation, also called “DOC 9756,” which outlines detailed procedures to arrive at the most probable cause of a crash.
Handa said the investigation into last week’s crash would likely be a long process as the aircraft was badly charred. He added that ascertaining the condition of the black boxes recovered from the crash site was vital as the heat generated from the crash could be possibly higher than the bearable threshold of the device.
The Indian government has set up a separate, high-level committee to examine the causes leading to the crash and formulate procedures to prevent and handle aircraft emergencies in the future. The committee is expected to file a preliminary report within three months.
Authorities have also begun inspecting and carrying out additional maintenance and checks of Air India’s entire fleet of Boeing 787 Dreamliners to prevent any future incident. Air India has 33 Dreamliners in its fleet.
The plane that crashed was 12 years old. Boeing planes have been plagued by safety issues on other types of aircraft. There are currently around 1,200 of the 787 Dreamliner aircraft worldwide and this was the first deadly crash in 16 years of operation, according to experts.


Russian media say top official is in Pyongyang again to meet North Korean leader

Russian media say top official is in Pyongyang again to meet North Korean leader
Updated 17 June 2025

Russian media say top official is in Pyongyang again to meet North Korean leader

Russian media say top official is in Pyongyang again to meet North Korean leader

SEOUL: A top Russian security official traveled to Pyongyang for the second time this month for another meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Russian state media reported Tuesday, the latest display of the countries’ deepening ties amid President Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine.
Russia’s Tass news agency said Russian Security Council Secretary Sergey Shoigu arrived in the North Korean capital on an unspecified “special” mission from Putin and was expected to meet with Kim. North Korean state media didn’t immediately confirm the visit.
Kim has supplied Russia with thousands of troops and large shipments of military equipment, including artillery and ballistic missiles, to support its military operation in Ukraine. Washington and Seoul have expressed concern that, in return, Kim may seek Russian technology transfers that could enhance the threat posed by his nuclear-armed military.
In April, Pyongyang and Moscow officially confirmed North Korean troops’ deployment to Russia for the first time, saying that soldiers of the two countries were fighting alongside each other to repel a Ukrainian incursion into Russia’s Kursk border region. Putin then thanked North Korea’s participation in the war and promised not to forget their sacrifices.
In their previous meeting on June 4, Kim told Shoigu that his government would “unconditionally support” Russia over the war in Ukraine and other critical international issues as they discussed strengthening the strategic partnership between their countries, according to North Korean state media. Tass then reported that Shoigu and Kim also discussed prospects for rebuilding the Kursk region and outlined steps to commemorate the combat contributions of North Korean soldiers.


India warns citizens to leave Tehran as some flee Iran

India warns citizens to leave Tehran as some flee Iran
Updated 17 June 2025

India warns citizens to leave Tehran as some flee Iran

India warns citizens to leave Tehran as some flee Iran

NEW DELHI: India on Tuesday urged its citizens to leave Tehran, while some nationals have already fled across the Iranian border as the country comes under Israeli bombardment.
With Israel vowing to keep up its attacks four days after launching its assault on Iran, which has launched retaliatory strikes, New Delhi said Indian students have already left Tehran.
“Residents who are self sufficient in terms of transport have also been advised to move out of the city in view of the developing situation,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
The warning came after Israel’s ally US President Donald Trump said “everyone” should “immediately” leave the Iranian capital, which is home to nearly 10 million.
New Delhi said “some Indians have been facilitated to leave Iran through the border with Armenia,” hundreds of kilometers (miles) northwest of Tehran.
The foreign ministry did not detail how many of its citizens have been affected in Iran, where there are around 10,000 Indians according to government data last year.
Thousands of Indians are also in Israel, and New Delhi has issued warnings for its citizens there to “stay vigilant.”

More than 600 foreign nationals have crossed from Iran into neighbouring Azerbaijan since the strikes began, a government official in Baku said.

“Since the start of the military escalation between Israel and Iran, more than 600 citizens of 17 countries have been evacuated from Iran via Azerbaijan,” the government source told AFP on Tuesday.

“Evacuees are transported from the border to Baku International Airport and flown to their home countries on international flights.”