Rohingya detainees on hunger strike to fight Saudi deportations to BD

Rohingya detainees on hunger strike to fight Saudi deportations to BD

Scores of Rohingyas detainees inside a Saudi detention centre have begun a hunger strike to stop the Gulf kingdom from deporting them to Bangladesh, reported Middle East Eye, a news outlet published from UK, on Thursday.

Inmates of the Shumaisi detention centre said they had "no alternative" but to start their hunger strike after scores of Rohingyas were deported last month to Bangladesh despite coming from Myanmar.

Photos and videos sent to the Middle East Eye (MEE) showed detainees refusing to take their daily food rations, leaving them on the floor for the Saudi immigration officers to collect.

Bags of bread and soup could be seen lying on the floor in crates as detainees retreated to their bunk beds in protest at possible deportations to Bangladesh.

Zahid (not real name), a Rohingya detainee in Shumaisi, said detainees had organised the hunger strike via Whatsapp and other messaging apps.

"When we started the hunger strike, there were three hundred of us, and then slowly more and more people began to join in," he told MEE via voice notes.

"One old man who took part in the hunger strike has already been taken to the hospital," Zahid said.

"We don't know how many more days we can last. They are pressuring us to eat. Please do pray for us."

Zahid added that their phones had been taken away from them after Rohingya who had been put on deportation flights to Bangladesh filmed their forced removal from Saudi Arabia.

This is the second hunger strike by Rohingya detainees in the last four months.

Another detainee Rafeed (not real name) said Saudi authorities had promised their freedom if they stopped their last hunger strike - only for some Rohingya to be deported to Bangladesh instead.

"At least 60 Rohingya were deported as if they were Bangladeshis. After seeing this, we can't go back to the killing there," said Rafeed.

"They told us they would release us, but up to now, no one could leave from here. We are seeking your help. Please don't keep us here.

"If possible, let the United Nations take us away. Some of our [Rohingya] brothers in Shumaisi are suffering mentally. Their parents are dying; brothers are dying. That's why it has become unbearable, and we have to strike again."

UNHCR did not respond to requests for comment at the time of writing.

Videos, images and voice notes sent to MEE last Sunday showed scores of Rohingya inside the Shumaisi detention centre handcuffed and prepared for deportation to Bangladesh, despite coming from Myanmar.

In November, Middle East Eye reported that Rohingya detainees were being prepared for deportation just days after Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina visited Saudi Arabia and met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Detainees told MEE they were punched in the chest by Saudi immigration police and forced to sign documents testifying to their "full mental health" on Saudi Interior Ministry forms before their deportation to Bangladesh.

Scores of Rohingyas had resorted to using smugglers to obtain passports, often via forged documents, following Myanmar's ban on Rohingya obtaining Burmese passports.

Many Rohingya locked up in the Shumaisi detention centre came to Saudi Arabia on Bangladeshi passports, while others entered on passports from different South Asian countries, including Bhutan, India, Pakistan and Nepal.

Bangladesh has jailed more than a dozen Rohingya deported from Saudi Arabia for using fake documents to get to the kingdom - a move Amnesty International condemned.

The deportation of Rohingya in Saudi Arabia drew criticism as the ethnic Muslim community in Rakhine of Myanmar faced the most brutal campaign since August 2017 that forced some 750,000 Rohingya to Bangladesh, creating a major refugee crisis in the southeast of Bangladesh.

They have been denied citizenship and basic rights by Myanmar though they have been living in Myanmar for generations.