Headlines
  • After talks in Washington on Tuesday that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio described as a "historic opportunity" for peace, Israel and Lebanon agreed to hold direct talks.
  • Iran talks could resume "over the next two days," according to US President Donald Trump, after the failure of last weekend's first round in Pakistan.
  • Six merchant ships turned around after "direction from US forces," according to the US, and no ships were able to pass through the blockade in the first 24 hours.
  • According to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, there were at least 35 deaths and 159 injuries in Lebanon on Tuesday.
  • The southern Lebanon district of Bint Jbeil has been hit by an Israeli airstrike.
  • "The short-term authorization permitting the sale of Iranian oil already stranded at sea is set to expire in a few days and will not be renewed," according to the US Treasury Department.

More Details

UN Human Rights Chief Advises Rohingya to Wait for Repatriation

Sunil Barua and Abdur Rahman/Cox’s Bazar,Bangladesh

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet (center) walks inside Camp 4, part of the sprawling Kutupalong camp that houses Rohingya in Ukhia, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 16, 2022.Photo Courtesy:Abdur Rahman/BenarNews

U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet advised Rohingya to wait for repatriation because the present situation in Myanmar’s Rakhine state is not stable, according to refugees who met with her at camps in southeastern Bangladesh on Tuesday.

Bachelet spent the day holding separate talks with Rohingya leaders, women, youth and religious representatives in camps along the border with Myanmar, as part of the first-ever visit to Bangladesh by a United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Bachelet will be finishing her job in that role when her term expires on Aug. 31.

Reporters were not allowed into Bachelet’s meetings with the Rohingya.

Amena Khatun, one of nine Rohingya women who participated in one of the meetings, said they discussed gender-based violence.

“The High Commissioner asked us why we came here. In reply, we said we came here to save our lives from torture. We want to return to our homeland if we can have citizenship,” Khatun told BenarNews.

Kamrun Nesa, another participant in the women’s meeting, said she and others called for compensation for a crackdown by Myanmar’s military against Rohingya Muslims that forced nearly 750,000 members of the stateless minority group to flee across the border and seek shelter, starting in August 2017.

The sprawling Rohingya camps and settlements in Cox’s Bazar house about 1 million refugees from Rakhine state.

“Expressing my will to return to my Rakhine home, I said to the High Commissioner that I took shelter in Bangladesh five times [while] fleeing from Myanmar. Bangladesh has given us shelter on its land, but we are living here as prisoners,” Nesa told BenarNews, referring to a Bangladeshi government policy that prohibits Rohingya from venturing outside the confines of the camps.

“In reply, Bachelet said the situation in Rakhine is not stable now, so until the situation is normal, sending us there will not be wise,” she said, adding Bachelet told her that the United Nations would have a role in supervising repatriation.

Bachelet did not immediately release a statement after her four-hour visit to Cox’s Bazar district.

Since she landed in Dhaka on Sunday morning, she has met with the country’s foreign, law, home, and education ministers, and is scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Wednesday before holding a press conference to mark the end of her visit.

Mawlana Md. Jamil, who participated in the meeting with religious leaders in Cox’s Bazar, told BenarNews that the high commissioner asked them about stopping violence and other unethical activities in the camps.

“We replied to her that religious leaders were always advising people to keep away from bad activities,” he said.

His group also raised concerns about repatriation.

Jamil said he and others called for repatriation under Responsibility to Protect – known as R2P – an “international norm that seeks to ensure that the international community never again fails to halt the mass atrocity crimes of genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.”

The concept emerged in response to mass atrocities in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, according to the Global Center for the Responsibility to Protect.

“She asked us to wait for everything,” Jamil said.

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet (right) speaks with an official from the International Organization for Migration after meeting with Rohingya religious leaders at a refugee camp in Ukhia, Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, Aug. 16, 2022.Photo Courtesy:Sunil Barua/BenarNews

Access to education

Other Rohingya expressed worries about a lack of access to education for their children.

Hafez Khurshid, who attended the meeting of religious leaders, said law and order efforts would improve if access to education for all Rohingya boys and girls was ensured.

He said 10- to 12-year-olds do not have access to education inside the camps.

“We demanded at least religious education for them,” he said.

The future is dark for young people because of the lack of learning programs, according to Abdul Aziz, a Rohingya youth leader.

“I asked her [Bachelet] to take steps to start arranging education for Rohingya refugees under the Myanmar curriculum,” he said.

Shah Rezwan Hayat, Bangladesh’s commissioner for refugee relief and repatriation, said his delegation and U.N. officials discussed relief efforts for Rohingya along with repatriation. He did not release details about the discussions.

Copyright ©2015-2022, BenarNews. Used with the permission of BenarNews

Related Article

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026

Japan’s Combat Role in Philippines War…

Japan sending combat troops to participate in upcoming exercises in the Philippines is a signal of a ...
April 9, 2026

PNG-Australia Defense Treaty Creates Jobs, Risks…

Six months after Papua New Guinea and Australia signed a bilateral defense treaty, public opinion in ...
April 8, 2026

China-US Competition for Rare Earths Sparks…

A U.S. plan to potentially mine an area of Pacific seabed roughly the size of Nevada near two U.S. t ...
April 2, 2026

North Korean Hackers Offer $70,000 Per…

Cybersecurity engineer Toufik Airane was approached by a North Korean hacker who offered him a small ...
March 27, 2026

Vietnam Protests China’s Development of Disputed…

Vietnam has condemned China’s land reclamation activities at Antelope reef in the disputed Paracel ...
March 24, 2026

Other Article

Bizzare News

In North Carolina,12-Foot Alligator Found Perched…

According to social media photos, an alligator was seen lounging on the porch of a house in coastal ...
April 15, 2026
Pet Corner

Barbado da Terceira Dog Breed

The Azores islands of Portugal are the origins of the Barbado da Terceira dog breed.They are medium- ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Web Application Firewalls (WAFs)

By filtering, tracking, and preventing any dangerous HTTP/S traffic that could enter the web applica ...
Pick of the Day

Photo Opportunity for 2026 Heads of…

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres attends a photo opportunity for the 2026 Heads of ...
Bizzare News

92 Year Old Japanese Woman Becomes…

Yoshie Watanabe, who was born on April 6, 1934, into a family of nine, is officially recognized by G ...
April 14, 2026
Pet Corner

Toy Poodle

A small version of the Standard model is the Toy Poodle.The coats of Toy Poodles are curly.Apricot, ...

Top