July 6, 2026
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Get Myanmar refugees home, not to camps: Ex-UN chief Annan

United Nations
Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has urged Myanmar to make sure the half-million Rohingya Muslim refugees who have fled in the last

two months can go home, and not go to camps.

Myanmar’s government needs to “create conditions that will allow the refugees to return with dignity and with a sense of security” and help them

rebuild in violence-wracked Rakhine state, said Annan, who recently headed a commission on the crisis there.

“They should not be returned to camps,” he said after addressing an informal, private Security Council meeting on the issue. “They need

assistance to get their homes back.” Myanmar’s UN mission didn’t respond to a request for comment on yesterday’s session. The country’s

leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, said Thursday that she had created a committee to oversee all international and local assistance in Rakhine and

that the impoverished state needs development.

Roughly 1 million Rohingya make up a long-persecuted minority in the Southeast Asian country. The Buddhist majority regards them as having

migrated illegally from Bangladesh, although many Rohingya families have lived in Myanmar for generations.

They were stripped of their citizenship in 1982.

After earlier waves of Rohingya flight, about 1,20,000 live in camps outside Rakhine’s capital, Sittwe.

In an unprecedented exodus, more than 5,00,000 Rohingya have fled from Rakhine to neighboring Bangladesh since August 25, when security

forces clamped down after the latest in a series of attacks on police posts by a Rohingya militant group.

Many houses were burned in the crackdown, and Rohingya refugees have described rape, looting and abuse.

The UN and some countries have called the events “ethnic cleansing,” which Myanmar’s government denies. It has blamed the crisis on

terrorism.

The August attacks came a day after the Annan-led commission released its report, which called for economic development and social justice

to counter the deadly violence.

The Security Council has repeatedly discussed Myanmar recently, but views have been divided among the veto-wielding members.

At a meeting late last month, Britain, France and the US demanded an end to what they called ethnic cleansing, while China’s ambassador

called for patience. Russia’s envoy warned that “excessive pressure” could only worsen the problems.

Yesterday’s meeting was “particularly useful and helpful to build consensus” on two goals: supporting the recommendations of Annan’s

commission and denouncing “the totally inacceptable status quo,” French Ambassador Francois Delattre said. He co-chaired the session with

British envoy Matthew Rycroft.

Get Myanmar refugees home, not to camps: Ex-UN chief Annan

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Get Myanmar refugees home, not to camps: Ex-UN chief Annan

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