Asean should show leadership on Rohingya

Two years on, Asia is no closer to ending its worst refugee crisis in decades. Over 900,000 Rohingya are in Bangladesh alone, including 759,000 who fled a campaign of violence by the Myanmar military in Rakhine state that began in August 2017. Hundreds of thousands had already left in earlier episodes of violence, to Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia, as well as in India and further afield. This is an Asian crisis, but Southeast Asia should show stronger leadership.

Southeast Asia’s leaders will come together on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly this month and during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) summit in November. Asean has been one of the few actors able to engage the Myanmar government since 2017. The region’s leaders must show compassion for the Rohingya and push Myanmar to take steps to end the violence, discrimination and persecution that forced out the Rohingya.

As a medical humanitarian organization providing health care to the Rohingya in Malaysia, Myanmar and Bangladesh, Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) witnesses the daily struggles they face. In Bangladesh and Malaysia, the Rohingya do not have refugee status and need some form of temporary legal stay. In Myanmar, they are denied citizenship and treated as foreigners. Statelessness is the root of their vulnerability.

In Malaysia, MSF treats Rohingya patients badly injured in work accidents who are deterred from seeking medical care at public hospitals due to fear of being reported to immigration. Malaysia can lead by example on the question of status, by granting the Rohingya some form of temporary status to stay in the country legally.

In Bangladesh, MSF teams see how the Rohingya languish in squalid camps, unable to build a future for themselves with formal education or work. Bangladeshis’ generosity is wearing thin, and refugees in the camps face growing curtailment of rights. They are barred from independently accessing public health facilities due to movement restrictions, and specialized services for mental health and sexual and gender-based violence are lacking, despite high needs.

In Myanmar, the situation continues to worsen. Since January 2019, an upsurge in fighting between the military and the Arakan Army, an ethnic Rakhine insurgent group, has displaced tens of thousands. This new wave of violence is affecting all communities.

An estimated 550,000-600,000 Rohingya still in Rakhine state endure discriminatory restrictions on freedom of movement, which limit their access to basic services, such as health care. In northern Rakhine, it is costly and potentially dangerous for the Rohingya to seek medical treatment: They must pass police checkpoints on the way to hospital that require paperwork and bribes.

The Asean Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on Disaster Management (AHA) is supporting the government’s preparations for repatriation. This is a positive step forward, yet AHA cannot independently assess the situation in northern Rakhine. As a result, a report released by AHA in June did not convey the reality on the ground, such as the limited access to health care.

At the political level, Asean should support Myanmar to implement the recommendations of the Rakhine Advisory Commission, led by the late UN secretary general Kofi Annan. If realized in full, in the spirit they were drafted, the recommendations will benefit all communities.

The Rohingya—those still in Myanmar and those who have fled—need clarity on their citizenship rights. Asean can engage Myanmar at a technical level on issues such as birth registration, while pushing for a citizenship verification process that meets international standards.

Asean needs to have a broader conversation with the Myanmar government. Member states should place the exclusion and discrimination toward the Rohingya at the center of their discussions. Rakhine state must stay on the agenda, in Asean meetings and at the UN General Assembly. In these gatherings, Southeast Asian leaders should say with one voice that inclusion, not segregation, is the solution.

Beatrice Lau is Medecins Sans Frontieres head of mission in Malaysia.

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