Tuesday, June 2, 2015

U.S. Official Urges Myanmar to Give Citizenship to Rohingya

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia—A senior U.S. official said on Monday that resettlement in a third country isn’t the answer to the swelling tide of boat people in Southeast Asia and called for Myanmar to give citizenship to Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecution there.
Anne Richard, U.S. assistant secretary of State for population, migration and refugees, said resettling all Rohingya refugees in the U.S. would entice others to leave their homeland.
“The answer to the issue is peace and stability and citizenship for the Rohingyas in Rakhine state, and that is the solution,” she said at the end of a three-day visit to Malaysia.
Since early May, more than 4,600 boat people from Myanmar and Bangladesh have been brought ashore from Southeast Asian waters. Several thousand more are believed to still be at sea after human smugglers abandoned their boats amid a regional crackdown.
Some are Bangladeshis who left their impoverished homeland in hope of finding jobs abroad. But many are Rohingya Muslims who have fled persecution in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, which has denied them basic rights, including citizenship, and confined more than 100,000 to camps. There are more than one million Rohingya living in the country formerly known as Burma.
Malaysia and Indonesia, which initially pushed away boats carrying the migrants, recently said they would give temporary shelter to the boat people on condition that they are resettled within a year.
Ms. Richard said 18-24 months would be a more realistic time frame for the U.S. to resettle refugees.