Rohingya women\, children in jail despite being granted bail

Rohingya women, children in jail despite being granted bail

Press Trust of India  |  Agartala 

The children and women among the 31 Rohingya Muslims, who were stranded on the India-border for four days, were granted by a court, but had to go to jail as no one appeared to submit the bonds for them.

The 31 Rohingyas, who had apparently come from Jammu and Kashmir, were stuck in a no-man's land beyond the barbed wire fence along the India-border in Tripura since January 18.

The (BSF), after consulting with the Home Ministry, handed them over to the station in district on Tuesday. They were later produced before the court.

Debnath, who appeared in court on behalf of the Rohingyas, sought their bail on the ground that they could not be treated as illegal immigrants because was a signatory to the resolutions of the High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

He also pleaded before the court that there would be no one to look after the innocent children in the absence of their mothers.

The court granted bail to the women and children, but as no one appeared to furnish the bail bonds, they were sent to the Bishalgarh Central Jail, Pranab Sengupta, officer-in-charge, station, said.

The jailor of the Bishalgarh Central Jail, Banikanta Debbarma, said, "Like the other inmates, the Rohingyas are also given three meals a day, according to the diet prescribed by the government. Their diet includes pulses, rice, milk, biscuits."

The 17 Rohingya children were staying with their mothers in a separate cell provided by the authorities, he said, adding that the seven men were put up in a separate cell in the section for men.

The situation of the 31 Rohingyas had led to a blame game between the BSF and its counterpart in -- the Border Guards Bangladesh (BGB) -- with the two sides accusing each other of pushing them into their territories.

The decision to hand over the Rohingyas to the was taken after the BSF and the BGB failed to reach a decision during several rounds of talks on the issue.

Twelve and 62 Rohingyas were apprehended in Tripura in 2017 and 2018 respectively.

In October 2017, the (MHA) had ordered all the state governments to identify and monitor Rohingya refugees.

It had said the Centre viewed the infiltration of Rohingyas from Rakhine state of into Indian territory as a burden on the country's resources, aggravating the security challenges to the country.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims, described by the UN as the most persecuted minority in the world, fled their homes in 2017 to escape an alleged crackdown by the Myanmarese military.

Many of them reached via Bangladesh.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, January 23 2019. 22:00 IST