Bangladesh and Myanmar agreed on Tuesday to begin by November the repatriation of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims who fled to Bangladesh to escape a Myanmar army crackdown, though doubts about a speedy return are likely to persist.
“We are looking forward to start the repatriation by mid-November,” Bangladesh’s Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque told reporters in Dhaka after a meeting with a Myanmar delegation led by senior foreign ministry official Myint Thu.
Myint Thu hailed what he called a “very concrete result on the commencement of the repatriation”.
However, the U.N. refugee agency said conditions in Rakhine state were “not yet conducive for returns”, stressing that they must be voluntary. Necessary safeguards are “absent” in the region, where it has had only limited access amid continuing restrictions for media and other independent observers, it said.