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Rohingya rest on Lampanah Leungah beach after landing in Aceh province, Indonesia on February 16, 2023. Photo: AP
Opinion
Anthony Ware and Kristina Kironska
Anthony Ware and Kristina Kironska

As Rohingya crisis worsens, public support is high in Australia and New Zealand to take them in

  • In surveys conducted last year, a majority of Australians and New Zealanders said they support the resettlement of more Rohingya refugees in their countries
  • Australia’s response to the Rohingya crisis has been to provide humanitarian aid, but has resisted calls to resettle any of the refugees from the camps
Nearly one million stateless Rohingya Muslims who fled brutal ethnic cleansing in Myanmar have been languishing in extremely congested refugee camps in Bangladesh for the past five-and-a-half years.
While the United States recently announced a resettlement programme for Rohingya refugees and Britain resettled around 300 Rohingya from the camps before 2020 under a now-defunct scheme, this hasn’t caused even a dent in the number of people living in the world’s largest refugee camp.

No other countries have accepted refugee applications from the camps, but the Bangladeshi Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen has expressed optimism that a good number of Rohingya may eventually be resettled by the US and others.

01:54

Refugees from Bangladesh survive 15 days at sea to reach Indonesia aboard small boat

Refugees from Bangladesh survive 15 days at sea to reach Indonesia aboard small boat

Since 2008, Australia has granted visas to just 470 Rohingya under its special humanitarian programme – a very small number considering the extreme need.

All of these refugees were accepted into the programme from Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and other countries in the region. This creates a perverse incentive for Rohingya from the Bangladesh camps to get on rickety boats and make the dangerous sea journey to those countries.

UN figures show a more than 360 per cent surge in the number of Rohingya who boarded boats to try to get to Malaysia and Indonesia last year, with 3,500 making the journey, compared to just 700 in 2021.

Australia is relatively more resourceful, so I think it’s high time Australia come forward and resettle some more of those distressed people
AK Abdul Momen, Bangladeshi Foreign Minister

In early February, Momen called on Australia to do more to resettle the Rohingya stranded in his country.

“Australia is relatively more resourceful, so I think it’s high time Australia come forward and resettle some more of those distressed people … Australia has the capacity, it has the resources – there’s only a need for a political mindset,” he said.

According to our new research, there is public support for this to happen. In surveys conducted last year, a majority of Australians and New Zealanders said they have positive views about the Rohingya and support the resettlement of more Rohingya refugees in their countries.

Increasingly dire conditions

The UN high commissioner for human rights has called the violence the Rohingya suffered at the hands of the Myanmar military a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing”. And a major UN investigation confirmed the mass killings and rapes were committed with “genocidal intent”.

There is clearly no hope of the Rohingya returning to their homes for the foreseeable future. A military coup in Myanmar two years ago brought to power the very army that perpetrated the crimes against the Rohingya.

And they have a very limited future in Bangladesh, where the authorities have recently been restricting their livelihoods, movement and access to education.

Fates of Rohingya boats across Asia spotlight crisis of refugees ‘left to die’

A UN humanitarian appeal to support the Rohingya refugees received only half the funding required in 2022, leaving many needs unmet and Bangladesh to shoulder much of the burden.

The situation became so dire last November, the UN Central Emergency Response Fund had to release US$9 million in emergency funding just to make sure the refugees had enough food, water and sanitation items.

So, in the absence of a repatriation plan, can the world be persuaded to accept more refugees?

What our research found

Our research shows a majority of the public would support this in Australia and New Zealand.

We recently reviewed data from a large-scale online survey as part of the Sinophone Borderlands project investigating global attitudes towards China and other issues. The survey collected responses from over 1,200 people in 56 different countries between 2020 and 2022 – more than 80,000 altogether. Several questions asked about the Rohingya people specifically.

When asked how positively or negatively respondents felt about the Rohingya people on a scale of zero to 100, the average Australian response was 53.6, while in New Zealand it was 60.8.

Why Malaysia is bracing for a fresh influx of Rohingya refugees

There was minimal variation by gender or when comparing urban versus rural, but we saw more positive responses among those who were educated, younger and satisfied with their country’s political situation and/or their own economic well-being.

When asked specifically about their level of support for the resettlement of displaced Rohingya in their country, responses were actually more positive.

Asked to represent their support on a scale of one (definitely no) to seven (definitely yes), the average (mean) response in Australia was 4.20 and in New Zealand it was 4.54. Again, there was minimal variation by gender, but more highly educated respondents were more positive.

Interestingly, we didn’t notice much variation when it came to political party, either. Unsurprisingly, those on the left responded with higher levels of support for Rohingya resettlement in both countries. However, the average level of support was still more positive than negative for voters of all main parties.

03:31

5 years on, what remains of the Rohingya refugees since fleeing the threat of genocide?

5 years on, what remains of the Rohingya refugees since fleeing the threat of genocide?

What Australia and New Zealand are doing

Australia’s response to the Rohingya crisis has been to provide humanitarian aid, but it has resisted calls to resettle any of the Rohingya from the camps.

When we contacted the Home Affairs Department about this, a spokesperson responded by saying the government is “committed to generous and flexible humanitarian and settlement programmes that meets Australia’s international protection obligations”.

“The UNHCR and the international community continue to work on creating conditions for a safe return of Rohingya people to Myanmar. Australia’s response continues to focus on humanitarian aid to Bangladesh and Myanmar,” the spokesperson said.

“Any persons, including Rohingya, who believe they meet the requirements for a humanitarian visa and wish to seek Australia’s assistance can make an application.”

A Rohingya refugee child receives vitamins during a medical check-up at a temporary shelter in Indonesia. Photo: AFP/File

Indeed, Australia has been generous in its humanitarian response to the Rohingya. It was the second-largest country donor in 2022, giving about A$20.4 million (US$13.8 million)

New Zealand’s response has been largely the same, committing about NZ$1 million (US$623,000) last year, but offering no refugee resettlement places specifically from the camps.

Our research suggests there is solid support for policy changes in both Australia and New Zealand, including among even conservative voters in both countries.

On the basis of this data, we strongly urge the Australian and New Zealand governments to reconsider their refugee intake policies and create a special Rohingya category to resettle refugees from Bangladesh.

Anthony Ware is Associate Professor in International and Community Development at Deakin University in Australia. Kristina Kironska is Assistant Professor at Palacky University Olomouc in the Czech Republic. This article was first published on The Conversation.
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