Dhaka Tribune
UNB
Publish : 25 Aug 2025
‘We must not be held hostage to mere rhetoric; time for action is now’
Dhaka Tribune
UNB
Publish : 25 Aug 2025
‘We must not be held hostage to mere rhetoric; time for action is now’
THE BUSINESS STANDARD
Ariful Hasan Shuvo
05 April, 2025
A Facebook post from the verified page of the Chief Adviser to Bangladesh's interim government broke the internet on Friday. After all, it offered a ray of hope in the longstanding Rohingya crisis the country has been grappling with for over eight years now.
"Myanmar authorities have confirmed to Bangladesh that out of a list of 800,000 Rohingyas sheltered in Bangladesh, they have identified 180,000 Rohingyas eligible for return," the post reads.
Myanmar has informed Bangladesh that out of 800,000 Rohingyas in the country, 180,000 have been identified as eligible to return.
Prothum Alo------
Diplomatic Correspondent
Dhaka
Updated: 04 Sep 2023
The issue of starting repatriation in smaller scale by December under a trilateral initiative mediated by China will be discussed in the meeting.
• This is the first time a delegation from Bangladesh has gone for talks since the junta assumed power in Myanmar.
• Bangladesh will place stress on measures to be taken by Myanmar to restore the confidence of the Rohingyas.
• A list of more than 3,000 Rohingyas have been provided with the goal of starting pilot repatriation project.
AA
DHAKA, Bangladesh
SM Najmus Sakib
04.09.2023
Bangladesh wants to start repatriation by December, Rohingya worry for their safety in Myanmar
Financial Express
A military analysis
Mohammad Mahfuzur Rahman
Published :Aug 16, 2023
It has been six years since the massive exodus of Rohingyas took place in August 2017. Initially it was perceived that Myanmar cannot get away for very long with atrocities and crime against humanity of such magnitude. Despite regional power's support and some permanent members support in UN Security Council the condemnation of the act was overwhelming worldwide. Bangladesh's diplomatic initiative bilaterally as well as taking some members of ASEAN on board there was a memorandum of understanding signed in November 2017 between Bangladesh and Myanmar on Rohingya repatriation. In fact, that created hope among many about resolving the refugee issue quickly. To my appreciation the expulsion of Rohingyas from Rakhine was a systematic, well-orchestrated military operation. With my background I understood the drama of taking back the Rohingyas was also a portrayal of military operation. In fact, it is part of a deception plan and psychological warfare. Any military operation without political objective is a nonsensical waste of resources. Tatmadaw (Myanmar military) generals being a bunch of meritocratic cunning professionals would not waste resources.
eurasiareview
By IPCS
By Krishna Kumar Saha*
June 10, 2023
daily obsever
Op-Ed
Dr Azeem Ibrahim
Published : Wednesday, 12 April, 2023
The
Rohingya refugee crisis is not over. Rohingyas fled Myanmar in 2017 and
afterwards, attempting to escape the genocidal advance of the country's
military. It burned their homes. It razed their villages. And it killed
whomever it could find.
More
than 700,000 people were forced from the country. It was an exodus not
seen in more than 50 years of refugee movement by the Rohingya out of
Myanmar. They had been persecuted openly since the 1970s, but never so
viciously as in the stage of the genocide from 2017 on.
Dhaka
Tribune