INDIAN COURT HALTS ROHINGYA DEPORTATION

Asia World

Thu 18 March 2021:

The Indian Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear a plea challenging the detention of over 150 detained Rohingya Muslim refugees to Myanmar, setting a hearing date for March 25.

At least 155 Rohingya “illegal immigrants” were detained by local police in different areas of the disputed Jammu region earlier this month.

According to the local newspaper The Hindu, Chief Justice of India Sharad Arvind Bobde accepted to hear the plea for the halt of refugees’ detention and proposed deportation.

“We approached the court regarding the detention of 155 Rohingyas and pleaded to stop Indian authorities from deporting them back to Myanmar,” Mohammad Salimullah, a member of the Rohingya community, told Anadolu Agency.

After their arrest, local authorities put 155 Rohingya in a “holding center” that had been set up under the Foreigners Act in the Hiranagar sub-jail of Kathua district in the disputed Jammu region which was established under a government notification dated March 5.

Thousands of Rohingya have been living in 39 camps in the Indian-administered Jammu region since 2007 when they fled their country.

While the UNHCR has provided refugee ID cards to half of the refugees from Myanmar, India does not recognize these cards, since it is not a signatory to the UN Convention on Refugees.

In January this year, at least 13 members from five Rohingya families in the northern state of Haryana were manhandled and detained by local police.

During the same month, New Delhi Police also detained eight Rohingya after they failed to show valid documents. They were sent to the detention center.

-AA

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