Rohingya crisis: Shelter not for humanity but for votes- Taslima Nasreen slams Bangladesh

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: Sep 18, 2017, 05:17 PM IST

Taslima Nasreen

Exiled author Taslima Nasreen is unimpressed with gesture of Bangladesh government.

 Exiled Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen on Monday launched a scathing attack at the Sheikh Hasina-led Bangladesh Government for extending support to the Rohingya refugees.

Taking to Twitter, the 'Lajja' writer said that Bangladesh Government is providing shelter to the Rohingya refugees from Myanmar's Rakhine, not on the ground of humanity, but to garner votes.
 he further questioned if Bangladesh would offer refuge to the Rohingyas, if they were not Muslims, but Hindus, Buddhists, Christians, or Jews.

"Bangladesh offered land to shelter Rohingya. What if these people were Hindus, Buddhists, Christians, Jews but not Muslims? Shelter not for humanity but for votes!" Taslima Nasreen said in her scathing tweet. she said in a tweet.

Taslima Nasreen currently lives in exile in India as she had to leave Bangladesh owing to fatwa from Islamists.  Bangladesh, which is facing an unprecedented influx of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar, plans to build new settlements to house about 4,00,000 refugees that entered the country over the past three weeks.  The new settlements will be built within the next 10 days on 2,000 acres in the Cox's Bazar district near Bangladesh's border with Myanmar, officials have said.

The authorities plan to construct 14,000 shelters, each with a capacity to hold six families, with the help of international organisations and the Bangladesh military.  The camps in Bangladesh were already overflowing with at least 4,00,000 Rohingya before the current exodus was provoked by Rohingya militants' attacking Myanmar police posts and an army base on August 25. Earlier in the day, the Centre filed an affidavit in the Supreme Court on deportation of Rohingya Muslims from India. 

The Centre today told the apex court that the Rohingya Muslims were "illegal" immigrants in the country and that their continuous stay posed "serious national security ramifications".

In an affidavit filed in the apex court registry, the NDA government said the fundamental right to reside and settle in any part of the country is available to citizens only and illegal refugees cannot invoke the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to enforce the right.

Sheikh Hasina during her speech at UN is expected to powerfully raise the issue of Rohingya Muslims. She will ask the global community to do more to protect the Rohangiyas, who are fleeing Myanmar fearing prosecution. UN too has asked governments to do their bit to shelter Rogangiyas and have slammed the Indian government.