India Forcing Scores of Rohingyas into Bangladesh, Myanmar: Human Rights Watch

Date:

Those expelled to Bangladesh included at least 192 Rohingyas despite being registered with the UNHCR. The authorities also put 40 refugees on a ship near the Myanmar coast and forced them to swim ashore, the watchdog said

NEW DELHI — Indian authorities have expelled scores of ethnic Rohingya refugees to Bangladesh and Myanmar without rights protections since May 2025, Human Rights Watch said on Thursday. The authorities have arbitrarily detained several hundred more, mistreating some of them, it said.

In May, states governed by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) initiated a campaign to expel Rohingya and Bengali-speaking Muslims for being “illegal immigrants.” Those expelled to Bangladesh included at least 192 Rohingya refugees despite being registered with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The authorities also put 40 Rohingya refugees on a ship near the Myanmar coast and forced them to swim ashore, the New York-based human rights watchdog said.

Dozens more have fled to Bangladesh to avoid the crackdown, it said.

“The Indian government’s expulsion of Rohingya refugees shows an utter disregard for human life and international law,” said Elaine Pearson, Asia Director at Human Rights Watch. “The actions taken against these refugees, who have fled atrocities and persecution in Myanmar, reflects the ruling BJP’s policy to demonise Muslims as ‘illegal’ migrants.”

HRW said interviews with nine Rohingya men and women in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar refugee camps revealed accounts of abuse. Six refugees expelled in May alleged that Indian authorities assaulted them and confiscated their money, phones, and UNHCR registration cards. Three others said they fled voluntarily — one each from Jammu and Kashmir, Andhra Pradesh, and Delhi — after police threatened them with arbitrary detention.

Expulsions by Force

A 37-year-old Rohingya woman detained in Assam’s Goalpara district said India’s Border Security Force (BSF) officers forced her family into Bangladesh at gunpoint on May 6. “When my husband asked where we should go, they slapped him so hard he still cannot hear properly,” she said. “They threatened to kill us if we spoke further.” The family had originally fled Myanmar in 2012 to escape military persecution.

That same day, Delhi Police detained 40 Rohingya refugees — 13 of them women — under the pretext of collecting identification data. They were flown to the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and forced aboard an Indian naval vessel, where they were allegedly beaten and interrogated. Once near Myanmar’s Tanintharyi coast, the crew gave them life jackets and ordered themto jump into the sea. “We were treated like the worst criminals,” one survivor said. “An officer told us: ‘No one will hold us accountable if we kill you all.’”

Reports of Abuse

Other refugees described similar abuses. A 40-year-old UNHCR-registered man from Hyderabad said police beat him, his wife, and their two children in Tripura state on May 15 while they tried to leave India by train. “They even beat my 4-year-old daughter,” he said. Police allegedly stole his money, phones, and belongings before handing them to border officials, who forced the family across into Bangladesh after making them record a false video statement claiming they were Bangladeshi.

HRW reported that authorities in Jammu vandalised Rohingya shelters and arrested at least 30 refugees in May. One Rohingya woman said police dismissed both her UNHCR and Myanmar nationality documents, calling her a “Bengali,” before she fled to Bangladesh with her children.

A 29-year-old Rohingya man forced across the Bangladesh border on June 20 summed up the despair: “From one place to another, from one country to another, we are fleeing and searching for hope—which is never going to be found.”

India’s Supreme Court has announced it will rule on whether Rohingya are “refugees” or “illegal entrants,” with the next hearing scheduled for September 23. In May, the court refused to halt deportations and dismissed claims that refugees were abandoned at sea, calling them a “beautifully crafted story.”

HRW urged India to immediately end arbitrary detentions and expulsions and to recognise Rohingya as refugees. “The authorities should work with UNHCR to protect their rights instead of violating them,” HRW’s Asia Director Pearson said. — With inputs from Agencies

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

Left Parties Back Justice Sudershan Reddy for Vice President’s Post

He is an ‘eminent jurist’ known for his commitment...

RPI to Launch Nationwide Stir for Quotas in Private Sector: Athawale

The move is likely to create friction within the...

Police Complaint Lodged Against Mahua Moitra for Using ‘Derogatory’ Word Against Amit Shah

KOLKATA — A Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) worker, on...

Turkey Cuts Economic and Trade Ties With Israel For Committing Genocide in Gaza

ISTANBUL -- Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan announced that...