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On remote Bangladeshi island, Rohingya refugees spend another Eid in isolation

Special On remote Bangladeshi island, Rohingya refugees spend another Eid in isolation
Rohingya children are seen playing at a housing complex for refugees in Bhasan Char, Bangaldesh, March 27, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 29 March 2025

On remote Bangladeshi island, Rohingya refugees spend another Eid in isolation

On remote Bangladeshi island, Rohingya refugees spend another Eid in isolation
  • 36,000 Rohingya refugees have been relocated to Bhasan Char island since 2020
  • They are not allowed to travel freely to mainland Bangladesh, some 68 km away

DHAKA: While Muslims around the world travel to their hometowns to be with family for Eid Al-Fitr, thousands of Rohingya refugees are marking the end of Ramadan on a remote Bangladeshi island, unable to even see their relatives in nearby refugee camps on the mainland.

Ajhida Begum, who lives on the Bhasan Char island with her husband and six children, is one of its first inhabitants. This year, she will mark her fourth Eid there.

“I really miss my relatives. While I can’t be with them physically, I make phone calls, both video and audio, and it’s the only way to maintain our bonds, especially during Eid Al-Fitr,” she told Arab News.

“Visiting friends and relatives, gossiping, and sharing special food with my parents and siblings on Eid are moments I always remember. I deeply miss these moments on Eid day.”

Begum is one of nearly 36,000 Rohingya refugees relocated to Bhasan Char by the Bangladeshi government since 2020.

Authorities aim to eventually move up to 100,000 Rohingya to the island to take pressure off Cox’s Bazar district, where more than 1.3 million refugees are cramped inside 33 camps, where they have limited access to job opportunities and education.

Bhasan Char offered a promise of better livelihoods, but the 52 sq. km island was originally a sandbar that emerged in the early 2000s. Vegetation is scarce and even fresh water supplies depend entirely on man-made systems.

“Life in Bhasan Char is very difficult and challenging, as sources of income for daily living are extremely limited here,” Begum said.

“I couldn’t arrange anything special for Eid this year. I borrowed some money from my neighbors to prepare a few dishes for my children. I’ve made vermicelli and chicken curry for them. Having a sweet dish on Eid morning is our tradition, and with the vermicelli, I’m trying to keep that tradition alive. That’s the only special thing I could manage for this Eid.”

Like most of those living on the island, she has not been able to visit her relatives since moving there.

Rohingya in Bhasan Char are not allowed to travel freely and require special permission to do so. There are no regular public transport services to the island, which is located some 68 km off the coast of mainland Bangladesh.

Molowi Abdul Jalil, who lives in Bhasan Char with his wife and children, is waiting for the moment to reunite with his family — not only in Cox’s Bazar but also in Myanmar.

“The things I most want to do with them are visiting our village and praying at the graves of my mother, father and relatives. I haven’t had the chance to do that since being forcibly displaced from our birthplace in Rakhine,” he said.

A mostly Muslim ethnic minority, the Rohingya have lived for centuries in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state but were stripped of their citizenship in the 1980s and have faced systemic persecution ever since.

In 2017 alone, some 750,000 of them crossed to neighboring Bangladesh, fleeing a deadly crackdown by Myanmar’s military, which the UN has been referring to as a textbook case of ethnic cleansing.

A father of two daughters and three sons, Jalil is in touch with his relatives through video and audio calls.

“I sadly miss visiting my relatives from door-to-door and the warm embraces we used to share,” he said.

“Celebrating Eid in complete isolation without friends and extended family is not really a celebration at all.”

But what living on the island offered was safety and better conditions than in the squalid camps of Cox’s Bazar.

“The security situation here is better. It’s less chaotic. Our children can enjoy a better environment with enough space to roam around,” he said.

“Livelihood opportunities are very limited, just as they are in the Cox’s Bazar ... Somehow, I was able to buy new clothes for my children. I couldn’t afford any for myself, but I am still grateful that Allah, the Almighty, helped me provide new clothes for the kids.”

Monira Begum, a young mother who spent most of her adult life in Bangladesh and moved to Bhasan Char when she was 20, is still not accustomed to the island.

“It breaks my heart when I think of preparing for Eid Al-Fitr on this island ... Nothing gives me hope for my life here. It’s a completely isolated existence, as we are not allowed to leave the island without prior permission from the authorities,” she said.

“I have already observed Eid four times on this harsh island. I can’t even imagine how it would be to celebrate Eid with my family in the Cox’s Bazar camp ... I remember when we used to share food, visit homes, and feel the warmth of hugging.”


Britain and Australia to sign 50-year nuclear submarine treaty

Britain and Australia to sign 50-year nuclear submarine treaty
Updated 25 July 2025

Britain and Australia to sign 50-year nuclear submarine treaty

Britain and Australia to sign 50-year nuclear submarine treaty
  • The three-way alliance was announced in 2021 to contend with growing Chinese military might in the Asia-Pacific region
  • It would deliver Australia at least eight submarines including three to five second-hand US Virginia-class submarines

MELBOURNE: Britain and Australia announced they will sign a cooperation treaty to build Australian nuclear-powered submarines and welcomed a review by President Donald Trump’s administration of the United States’ role in the trilateral defense deal.

Britain’s Defense Secretary John Healey and Foreign Secretary David Lammy met Friday with their Australian counterparts Richard Marles and Penny Wong in Sydney for an annual bilateral meeting.

Marles said he and Healey will sign a 50-year treaty Saturday that will underpin bilateral cooperation on building an Australian fleet of submarines powered by US nuclear technology.

“It is as significant a treaty as has been signed between our two countries since federation,” Marles said, referring to the unification of several British colonies to form the Australian government in 1901.

The three-way alliance was announced in 2021 to contend with growing Chinese military might in the Asia-Pacific region. It would deliver Australia at least eight submarines including three to five second-hand US Virginia-class submarines. Britain and Australia would cooperate to build their own SSN-AUKUS submarines.

US reviewing AUKUS trilateral submarine deal

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is reviewing the pact, known by the acronym AUKUS, that was entered into by US President Joe Biden’s administration. There are concerns that the US won’t provide Australia with its first Virginia-class submarine by the early 2030s as planned because US submarine-building was behind schedule.

Marles and Healey declined to speculate on whether Britain and Australia would continue with jointly building submarines if the US pulled out when questioned at a press conference.

“Australia and the UK welcome the review because we see this as a chance for a new administration to renew their commitment to AUKUS. And that’s what we expect,” Healey said.

“Any sort of hypotheticals that you suggest simply aren’t part of the picture,” Healey added, referring to the prospect of Britain and Australia proceeding without the US

The Australian government confirmed this week it had paid the US a second $500 million installment on the AUKUS deal. The first $500 million was paid in February.

The submarines are expected cost Australia up to $245 billion.

The meeting comes as 3,000 British military personnel take part in the largest military exercise ever conducted in Australia.

British aircraft carrier joins Australian war games

More than 35,000 military personnel from 19 nations are taking part in Exercise Talisman Sabre, which began in 2005 as a biennial joint exercise between the US and Australia.

Marles and Healey will inspect the British aircraft HMS Prince of Wales at the northern port of Darwin on Sunday. The carrier is in Australia to take part in the war games.

Lammy said the carrier’s arrival in Darwin was meant to send a clear signal to the world.

“With our carrier strike group docking in Darwin, I think we’re sending a clear signal, a signal of the UK’s commitment to this region of the world. Our determination to keep the Indo-Pacific free and open, and that we stand together,” he said.


Seven children killed in India school roof collapse: police

Seven children killed in India school roof collapse: police
Updated 25 July 2025

Seven children killed in India school roof collapse: police

Seven children killed in India school roof collapse: police
  • At least seven children were killed and 26 others injured Friday after part of the roof and walls of a government-run school collapsed in western India, police said

JAIPUR: At least seven children were killed and 26 others injured Friday after part of the roof and walls of a government-run school collapsed in western India, police said.
“Seven children have lost their lives so far and 26 others are injured,” Nand Kishore, a senior police officer in the state of Rajasthan, told AFP.


Philippines top court voids impeachment complaint against VP Duterte

Philippines top court voids impeachment complaint against VP Duterte
Updated 25 July 2025

Philippines top court voids impeachment complaint against VP Duterte

Philippines top court voids impeachment complaint against VP Duterte
  • The outcome could be a huge boost for the political ambitions of Sara Duterte

MANILA: Philippine Vice President Sara Duterte scored a major legal victory on Friday after the Supreme Court struck down an impeachment complaint against her, ruling it was unconstitutional.

The Philippines’ lower house of Congress impeached Duterte in February, accusing her of misusing public funds, amassing unusual wealth and threatening to kill Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, the First Lady, and the House Speaker.

The court said it was not absolving Duterte of the charges.

The outcome could be a huge boost for the political ambitions of Duterte. She is widely seen as a strong contender for the 2028 presidency, which Marcos cannot contest due to a single-term limit for Philippine presidents.

A conviction in an impeachment trial would have seen Duterte banned from office for life. She has said the move to impeach her, which came amid a bitter feud with Marcos, was politically motivated.

Duterte is the daughter of firebrand former President Rodrigo Duterte, who is now in the custody of the International Criminal Court over his bloody war on drugs. He has denied wrongdoing.


Court frees men accused in 2006 train bombings India blamed on Pakistan-based group

Court frees men accused in 2006 train bombings India blamed on Pakistan-based group
Updated 25 July 2025

Court frees men accused in 2006 train bombings India blamed on Pakistan-based group

Court frees men accused in 2006 train bombings India blamed on Pakistan-based group
  • Pakistan has always denied state complicity in evening rush-hour attacks that killed 187 people and wounded hundreds 
  • Ansari, now 48, was one of 12 men convicted in 2015 for murder, conspiracy, waging war against India 

MUMBAI: Nearly two decades lost, a family fractured and a city still without closure — the scars of the 2006 Mumbai train bombings remain, even as the men once blamed for the deadly attacks walk free.

After 19 years behind bars, Mohammad Sajid Margub Ansari can finally hold his daughter in his arms.

Ansari, now 48, was one of 12 men convicted in 2015 for murder, conspiracy and waging war against India over the 2006 train blasts.

The evening rush-hour attacks, carried out with pressure-cooker bombs hidden in bags beneath newspapers and umbrellas, killed 187 people and wounded hundreds more.

Five of the accused were sentenced to death, while the other seven — including Ansari — were given life imprisonment.

At the time of the blasts, Ansari was just 29, running a modest mobile and computer repair shop.

He was arrested soon after the explosions, reportedly accused of assembling the bombs and sheltering two Pakistani nationals.

But this week, a two-judge bench of the Bombay High Court overturned the convictions, ruling that the prosecution had “utterly failed” to prove the men were responsible.

The prosecution appealed to the Supreme Court to halt their release, but it declined to intervene.

“It feels amazing to be free,” Ansari told AFP. “We are innocent.”

Freedom, however, feels bittersweet for Ansari.

“My whole youth is gone. My family had to face financial troubles,” he said.

His wife was pregnant when Ansari was arrested, leaving him to miss his daughter’s entire childhood. In her early years, she wouldn’t even come near him.

“As a dad that felt terrible, that I could not hold my own daughter,” he said.

“I used to feel very helpless and think why do we have to go through all this when I am innocent.”

The 2006 attacks were initially blamed on the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, although a little-known outfit, Lashkar-e-Qahhar, later claimed responsibility.

Pakistan denied the allegations.

For survivor Chirag Chauhan, who was paralyzed from the waist down in one of the blasts, the acquittal of the men felt like being dragged “back to square one.”

“We don’t know what to do and where to start from. The entire system is hopeless,” he told AFP.

In 2006, Chauhan, now 40, was returning home from chartered accountancy training when the train he boarded was hit by an explosion.

Prosecutors said the explosives were deliberately placed in first-class coaches to target the city’s wealthy Gujarati community.

They also said the bombings were intended as revenge for riots in the western state of Gujarat in 2002, which left around 2,000 people dead, most of them Muslims.

A spinal cord injury left Chauhan requiring the use of a wheelchair.

“After 19 years if the accused are let free, who carried out the blasts then?” he asked.

But he also said there should be a “fair investigation,” noting that the now freed men could have been framed.

“All are equally to be blamed, the judiciary, the investigative agencies, everyone,” he said.

For Ansari, his years behind bars demand more than an acquittal.

“The agencies should be ashamed of what they did and should definitely apologize to us,” he said.

While his old mobile and computer repair shop is no longer an employment option, given the advances in technology since he was imprisoned, Ansari is aiming to rebuild his life.

He plans to finish the undergraduate law degree which he enrolled in while in prison.

“I hope to put it to good use,” he said.


Ukraine’s Zelensky says ‘listened’ to protesters on anti-graft law

Ukraine’s Zelensky says ‘listened’ to protesters on anti-graft law
Updated 25 July 2025

Ukraine’s Zelensky says ‘listened’ to protesters on anti-graft law

Ukraine’s Zelensky says ‘listened’ to protesters on anti-graft law
  • The adoption of the bill, which curbed the powers of two anti-graft bodies, triggered the biggest public protests in Ukraine
  • Ukrainian leader acknowledged there should ‘probably have been more of a dialogue’ before the law was adopted

KYIV: Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky said his government had heard protesters opposing a law revoking the independence of anti-corruption agencies and had responded by proposing new legislation.

The adoption of the bill, which curbed the powers of two anti-graft bodies, triggered the biggest public protests in Ukraine since Russia’s invasion and drew criticism from Kyiv’s European allies.

“It is absolutely normal to react when people don’t want something or when they dislike something,” Zelensky said in comments released to journalists on Friday, adding it was “very important that we listened and responded adequately.”

“For me, it was very important that we listened and responded adequately,” Zelensky added.

The government has since submitted a bill aimed at restoring the independence of the anti-graft bodies – the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine (NABU) and Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO).

It remains to be seen whether parliament, mostly loyal to Zelensky, will approve the draft law.

Zelensky acknowledged there should “probably have been more of a dialogue” before the law was adopted.

“I am focused on the issue of the war because right now, the number one issue in Ukraine is the war. The biggest problem is the war. The main enemy is Russia.”