Myanmar yesterday reiterated its to take back its citizens staying both in and outside two refugee camps and also in prisons in Bangladesh after verification of their nationality.
“Myanmar government has categorically informed us that they are ready to take back their citizens and they have the preparations to receive their documented and undocumented citizens, and sought lists of the Rohingyas for verification,” said Foreign Secretary Mijarul Quayes.
Addressing a press briefing after the annual foreign secretary-level
“Foreign Office Consultations” with Myanmar Deputy Foreign Minister
Maung Myint yesterday, he said sending back of refugees means voluntary
repatriation as per international law.
Mijarul said the Myanmar
side at the meeting expressed gratitude to the Bangladesh government for
not opening the border and not allowing Myanmar citizens into
Bangladesh during the recent sectarian violence in the northern Rakhine
province because it would create fresh problems in bilateral relations.
The
foreign secretary said the Myanmar government has already cleared a
list of 2,415 refugees out of around 29,000 in two camps to take them
back, and of them, 10 families have agreed to go back voluntarily.
He,
however, admitted that the repatriation is stalled due to recent
sectarian violence in Rakhine province, but it would start immediately
after improvement of the situation.
Myint reiterated his
government's decision to take back the Rohingya intruders, who are
staying outside the camps, and detained nationals, but it wants to
confirm their citizenship through verification before taking them back,
Mijarul said.
He mentioned that around four lakh undocumented
Rohingyas are now living in Bangladesh while the number of other Myanmar
citizens in prisons might be over 100.
At the 6th “Foreign Office
Consultations”, Mizarul led a nine-member delegation while Myint led a
six-member team, hich discussed a wide range of bilateral issues and
explored new areas for cooperation.
The issues that figured
prominently at the talks included Rohingya repatriation, formation of a
joint commission at foreign minister- level, BIMSTEC, trade expansion,
road, air and coastal shipping connectivity, submarine cable
cooperation, import of gas and electricity from Myanmar, cooperation in
the fileds of agriculture, fisheries and livestock, institutionalisation
of Joint Border Management as with India, defence cooperation, curbing
trafficking, and drugs and narcotics control.
The Bangladesh side
requested the Myanmar authorities to take effective measures so that
drug, especially Yaba, and arms are not smuggled into Bangladesh.
Various pending trade and investment- related agreements and MoUs also
came up for discussion.
The foreign secretary said the meeting
decided to form a joint commission headed by the foreign ministers of
Bangladesh and Myanmar soon.
Dhaka will send a draft structure of
the commission to Yangon and the Bangladesh foreign minister will
invite her Myanmar counterpart to attend its first meeting in Dhaka.
On
road connectivity, Quayes said the Myanmar side sought sending an
inter-ministerial delegation from Bangladesh regarding construction of a
128 km road to establish direct road links between the two countries.
Bangladesh
had earlier offered to construct 23 km of the road with its own funds
inside Myanmar, and asked Myanmar to build the remaining 105 km of the
road. Dhaka yesterday reiterated its readiness to construct the road as
per its earlier commitment.
On shipping connectivity, the foreign
secretary said the two countries have already a joint committee on
coastal shipping and Myanmar will send a delegation to Bangladesh to see
the infrastructure facilities.
In response to Bangladesh's
proposal to import hydroelectricity, the Myanmar side said they would
consider it after meeting their domestic demand and that it is not
possible for them to export electricity now.
To promote trade, Dhaka will soon arrange a single country exhibition in Yangon.
Meanwhile,
Myint called on Foreign Minister Dipu Moni at her office. He thanked
Dhaka for the support extended to Yangon in dealing with the recent
violence in Rakhine state, said a press release.
In response, Dipu Moni assured Dhaka's cooperation in restoring peace and harmony in the bordering state of Rakhine.
The Myanmar deputy foreign minister is now on a three-day visit to Bangladesh.
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