“This time, it (tripartite meeting) will be a secretary level meeting. We keep our hope very high (about positive outcomes),” he told reporters after attending Poush Utsab (winter festival) of Shurer Dhara at Lalmatia in Dhaka, reports BSS.
The foreign minister said that the tripartite meeting was supposed to be held this week but it is deferred to January 19 as the Chinese foreign minister is scheduled to visit Myanmar in the meantime.
Delegations from China and Myanmar will be in Dhaka to hold the meeting with Bangladesh side, he added.
Earlier, Beijing assured Dhaka that it would take initiatives to arrange the second round of foreign minister level ‘tripartite talks’ over Rohingya repatriation after Myanmar general elections that was held in November last.
The first such tripartite meeting among the foreign ministers of Bangladesh, China and Myanmar was held on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York in 2019.
Dr Momen said, so far, Bangladesh has handed over biometric data of 8,40,000 forcibly displaced Rohingyas to Myanmar authority.
“Earlier, we handed over around 6 lakh biometric data while, day before yesterday, we provided biometric data of 2,30,000 Rohingyas to them,” he added.
Expressing his frustration, the minister said Myanmar authority so far verified only 42,000 biometric data out of 8.4 lakh. “It’s unfortunate … there is huge lack of (Myanmar’s) sincerity,” he said.
Asked whether Dhaka is hopeful about the commencement of the repatriation after the tripartite meeting, Momen said, Dhaka is always hopeful about the Rohingya repatriation.
“We are doing our part of job…but our neighbour is not cooperating us,” he said.
The foreign minister reiterated that repatriation is the only solution to end the Rohingya crisis. “There is no alternative to repatriation,” he added.
Bangladesh is hosting over 1.1 million forcefully displaced Rohingyas in Cox’s Bazar district and most of them arrived there since August 25, 2017 after a military crackdown by Myanmar, which the UN called a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing” and “genocide” by other rights groups.
In last three years, Myanmar did not take back a single Rohingya while the attempts of repatriation failed twice due to trust deficit among Rohingyas about their safety and security in the Rakhine state – their land of origin.