Red Cross leader: Rohingya crisis needs political solutions

AP  |  Dhaka 

The international today said that humanitarian help alone will not solve the and are needed for the 700,000 people who fled from to to escape violence that targeted them.

The has said the military crackdown on Rohingya Muslims last August in retaliation for an insurgent attack was "ethnic cleansing."

and have signed an agreement for repatriating refugees, but its implementation is uncertain due to safety, verification and other concerns.

Peter Maurer, of the International Committee of the Red Cross, visited Myanmar's Rakhine state, where the refugees once lived, as well as the camps where they live now in Bangladesh's Cox's district. He said people in both places were suffering.

"I met those who stayed and those who left, and it is clear that people are suffering on both sides," Maurer said.

"People lack secure housing, electricity, latrines, medicine and health care. There are few options for people to earn an income to allow them to move beyond aid and emergency conditions." Maurer also said the conditions for repatriation to happen were tough.

"The conditions are simply not there for large numbers of people to return home," he said.

The Rohingya have faced state discrimination for generations in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

Maurer said their return would require "steps towards ensuring freedom of movement, access to basic services, freedom to undertake economic activity and access to markets in Rakhine, and most importantly trust in security arrangements for returnees."

He said that while he was in Myanmar, he met Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus, who described "how the social fabric and local economy have been destroyed, making people entirely reliant on humanitarian aid."

"In one village I visited, less than a quarter of the population remains, only 2,000 of the original 9,000 villagers," Maurer said.

In the camps in Bangladesh, over a million people live in misery, he said.

"Those sheltering in the camps of Cox's live in shocking conditions that violate human dignity," he said, noting the conditions in the camps will worsen with the monsoon rains arriving.

UN Antonio Guterres, and UN High Commissioner for Refugees all visited the refugee camps this week and promised to work with toward resolving the crisis.

"A better future for the people here will need inclusive political solutions, environmentally sustainable economic investment and a strong commitment to international and human rights," Maurer said in a statement in Dhaka, Bangladesh's capital, as he concluded his visit.

He met Sheikh yesterday and told her he found a positive attitude in Myanmar toward resolving the crisis, said Hasina's press secretary,

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First Published: Tue, July 03 2018. 16:35 IST