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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Rohingya refugee crisis a ‘grave security risk’, warns ICG

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YANGON: Prolonged displacement of Rohingya refugees in squalid Bangladeshi camps poses a “grave security risk”, conflict analysts ICG warned on Thursday, raising the spectre of militants recruiting among the displaced and launching cross-border attacks on Myanmar. Raids by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) on August 25 sparked the vicious Myanmar army response which has forced more than 620,000 Rohingya to flee Rakhine state for Bangladesh.


ARSA “appears determined to regroup and remain relevant” and may draw on desperate Rohingya refugees languishing in camps for future operations, the ICG International Crisis Group said in the report.


The group may “shift to cross-border attacks” using Bangladesh as a base for recruitment and training, the study said, cautioning the risk of an ever-deepening cycle of violence is all too real.


“Such attacks would have profoundly negative consequences,” straining Myanmar-Bangladesh relations and worsening contempt for the Rohingya “that would further diminish prospects of an eventual refugee return”.


Global outcry over the refugee crisis, one of the worst in recent history, has triggered a hyper-defensive response inside the country, where anti-Rohingya attitudes have hardened since ARSA’s emergence.


Myanmar does not recognise the Rohingya as a distinct ethnic group eligible for citizenship, instead calling them “Bengali”, suggesting they are illegal immigrants.


In another serious looming risk, ICG warned that Rohingya’s plight has become a “cause celebre of the Muslim world” with Al Qaeda, IS and other global militant groups calling for attacks on Myanmar.


Myanmar’s military has repeatedly used the terror threat to justify its campaign in northern Rakhine state.


ARSA has distanced itself from any wider global cause for militancy, saying it is only fighting to protect Rohingya rights.


— AFP


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