Uncertainty looms as Rohingya mark 1st Muslim holiday on remote island

by Sami Burgaz
Rohingya say they cannot remain stateless for long, need to be resettled soon in their homeland.

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AA) – As thousands of stateless Rohingya refugees are celebrating their first Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday on a remote island in Bangladesh, a sense of uncertainty has prevailed over whether they will be peacefully repatriated to their home country of Myanmar.

Since last December, Bangladeshi authorities have relocated nearly 20,000 members of the persecuted ethnic minority group to the country’s distant island of Bhasan Char in the southern Bay of Bengal with promises of a better life and livelihoods.

The Rohingya, living in congested makeshift settlements in Bangladesh’s southern district of Cox’s Bazar, finally responded positively to the relocation to the island, which is reportedly prone to natural disasters, for what is supposed to be a brief interim period before their repatriation to their home country with safety and dignity.

“Since having fled to Bangladesh nearly four years ago, I had been living at a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar in a very crammed and squalid environment with my tent made of tarpaulin sheets and bamboo sticks. But now I along with my family members have been living in a concrete house with a better environment,” Mohammad Rashid, a Rohingya on Bhasan Char, told Anadolu Agency.

He said that for the first time during Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of the Sacrifice, they were served enough meat from sacrificed cows — one kilogram per person.

“But nothing can be comparable to those days at my home in Myanmar’s Rakhine state when I slaughtered my own cow and celebrated the Eid with my dear and near ones,” he said, adding many of them were killed by the Myanmar army during the August 2017 military crackdown on Rohingya Muslims.

Rashid is one of the 750,000 Rohingya who, according to an Amnesty International report, fled Myanmar since Aug. 25, 2017 to Bangladesh, pushing the total number of stateless people in the world’s largest refugee camp in the South Asian country to above 1.2 million.

Expressing similar sentiments, Motiur Rahman, another Rohingya on the island, told Anadolu Agency that except for a mosquito outbreak and electricity shortage, living conditions on the island are far better than in the refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar.

“In my four years of living in Bangladesh, for the first time I have celebrated Eid al-Adha with a handsome amount of meat for my family as I once enjoyed in my home country,” Rahman said.

Animals such as cows and goats are sacrificed during the Eid al-Adha to commemorate the willingness of Prophet Ibrahim, or Abraham, to sacrifice his son at God’s command, before the last-minute divine substitute of a ram. The sacrificed meat is then distributed to the needy.

But in want of livelihood, Rahman has to stay home idle and wait for relief.

“It is an uncertain life without any future. My kids are not getting a proper education. If it continues long, we will lose our existence in the future.”

‘No future on Bhasan Char’

Tensions have been steadily mounting among Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh as their dream of a peaceful repatriation is being shattered again and again amid new challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the February military coup in Myanmar.

“It seems that we have to stay in Bangladesh many years as the brutal military, which again have captured power illegally, are not at all interested in taking us back,” said Mohammad Ansar, a Rohingya youth on Bhasan Char.

“Maybe Bangladesh will shelter us, international communities will provide us with necessary assistance, but we are being treated here as stateless people without refugee status. So, we have no future here.”

Ansar said Eid al-Adha this year is better than those in previous three years.

“But the long-cherished issue of a safe and dignified repatriation is also under the most uncertainty this year. So nothing can bring peace to us. We want to establish our next generation on our own land.”

Rohingya children enjoy Eid

Hundreds of Rohingya children on the island have enjoyed the Eid with a huge festivity. There have been no restrictions on their free movement during the Eid and no pandemic cases have been reported on the island, although 26 Rohingya have died and 2,331 have been infected with the virus in the mainland camps.

Rohingya children in groups have come out of their homes and wandered throughout the island and played together. They have also worn new clothes, in line with the common practice of Muslims to buy new clothing for the Eid based on the tradition of Prophet Muhammad to wear something new during the holy festival.

Around the Eid celebrations, the whole island has assumed an environment of festivity, with men busily slaughtering cows, women cooking and children playing.

Assurance of livelihoods

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Bangladesh’s Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner Shah Rezwan Hayat said their staff had worked hard to make this Eid enjoyable for Rohingya, especially on the remote island.

“There are even families with 12 members each and we provided 12 kilograms of meat for such a single family. It was really a wonder for them,” Hayat said.

On the growing frustration of Rohingya over livelihoods, he said that after the Eid, agricultural activities would be extended and many Rohingya would get opportunities to engage in livelihoods.

“We are also going to launch new fishing projects there, and I hope that a good number of Rohingya can be involved in those projects,” he said.

He added that the Bangladeshi government is trying its best and working actively with various international platforms for the sustainable repatriation of Rohingya to their country of origin.

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