China has to go beyond tokenism to ensure return of Rohingya to Myanmar

The lights are dim at the end of the tunnel in case of repatriation of Rohingya refugees living in squalid camps in the coastal district of Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. The country hosts nearly 1.2 million Muslim Rohingya people who have fled ethnoreligious strife in neighboring Myanmar during a military genocidal campaign, which killed at least 9,000 people in 2017. The Tatmadaw (Myanmar military) backed campaign that the United Nations labeled a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing” saw hundreds of thousands of Rohingya driven across the border into Bangladesh in September 2017. More than a million refugees are crammed in tens of thousands of make-shift huts made of bamboo, thin plastic sheets, and corrugated tin roofs and the living conditions in the nauseating camps are dangerous. Often, fires blaze through the camps leaving thousands without shelter.

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