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3 years ago

Bangladesh disburses $0.5m to OIC to support Rohingya case

-Reuters file photo
-Reuters file photo

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Bangladesh has disbursed $0.5 million to OIC as part of a fund-raising campaign of the 57-nation grouping initiated to facilitate Gambia’s legal battle against Myanmar over Rohingya genocide in the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

“We have already disbursed the fund to the OIC for supporting Gambia in its legal battle,” said Bangladesh’s Permanent Representative to Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Mohammad Javed Patwary, who simultaneously serves as the ambassador to Saudi Arabia.

Patwary, who leads Dhaka at OIC’s Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM) in Niger, said that the OIC General Secretariat by now opened a dedicated account for Gambia’s battle at ICJ while the West African nation also signaled an urgent need for the fund, reports BSS.

 “I call for the urgent, voluntary and substantial contribution of the (OIC) member states for the legal case,” Gambia’s Justice Minister Dawda A Jallow while presenting the latest update of the Rohingya case at the CFM, where the Rohingya crisis appeared to be the key agenda.

He said Gambia needed approximately US$5 million to pay particularly the lawyers to run the case while it by now hired a reputed US-based law firm to stand by the prosecution side in the case.

But Jallow said “unfortunately” the law firm was yet to receive any significant payment for the legal services it rendered since September 2019 as “it is only this month that a sum of US$300,000 was paid to the law firm, which is less than 10 per cent of the total amount.”

The Gambian minister said the case was aimed to seek a conclusive and lasting solution to the Rohingya crisis and cautioned that all potential OIC interventions to ICJ regarding Rohingya cause should be conducted in coordination with his country for the sake of the cause.

He warned that any uncoordinated OIC intervention could affect the case and “seriously complicate matters”.

OIC General Secretariat officials said apart from Dhaka, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Nigeria so far provided financial support to the Gambia over the case.

Foreign minister Dr AK Abdul Momen was scheduled to lead the Bangladesh delegation to OIC’s two-day crucial 47th CFM session that began on Friday but COVID-19 detection at the last minute forced him to scrap his scheduled Niger visit.

Over 1.1 million Rohingyas fled their homeland in Myanmar’s Rakhine state to take shelter in Bangladesh’s bordering Cox’s Bazar district and most of them arrived there since August 25, 2017, after the Buddhist-majority East Asian country launched a ruthless military crackdown.

In November last year, Gambia had brought the case against Myanmar to the ICJ with the backing of OIC, Canada and the Netherlands while ICJ held its first hearing on December 10-12.

On January 23 last the ICJ made the historic unanimous decision ordering provisional measures to prevent further acts of genocide against the Rohingyas in Myanmar.

Bangladesh foreign minister Dr AK Abdul Momen earlier this week said in Dhaka that this decision would add afresh pressure on Myanmar in the “accountability and justice front” and to take back their nationals from Bangladesh.

”The OIC took the Rohingya issue seriously . . . all the OIC members have been supporting us strongly over the issue in the United Nations,” he said.

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