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Rohingya Refugee Faces Legal Hurdles After Rape in India

Rohingya asylum seeker, a 19-year-old woman, endured months of trauma after being raped and was forced to cross into Bangladesh for an abortion due to legal barriers in India. Despite her efforts, the accused remains free.

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Rohingya Rape Survivor’s Abortion and its Legal Complications

Rohingya asylum seeker faced months of trauma after being raped, forced to cross into Bangladesh for an abortion | Representative Image | Photo courtesy: Special Arrangement

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 Rape Survivor’s Abortion and its Legal Complications

Bengaluru: Two weeks ago Sadia (name changed to protect identity), a 19-year-old Rohingya asylum seeker in India, was finally able to terminate her pregnancy that resulted from a reported rape that happened in Tripura in June. It cost her 10,000 Bangladeshi Taka (Rs 7,000) to abort in a private hospital in Bangladesh.

Despite the reported crime happening in India, she had to access medical assistance to terminate the pregnancy in Bangaldesh’s Cox’s Bazar region, which accommodates nearly a million stateless Rohingya refugees in an area smaller than ‘Lutyens Delhi’ and hosting nearly eight times its population.

The last seven months have been an ordeal for Sadia. “There was pressure from the community not to [terminate the pregnancy], but I went ahead,” said Sadia, who travelled 40 minutes from her camp to a private hospital for the procedure.

In February, she was jailed in Tripura for ‘illegally’ entering India, then bailed out of prison after three months, and reportedly raped on the day of her release in early June by an influential man in the community who had helped with her release, Sadia said.

More than a month after the reported crime, she filed a complaint with the police in Bengaluru, where she had moved after her release from jail. In her search for justice, she had to deal with an unfamiliar criminal justice system in a country that does not have a national protection framework for refugees and asylum seekers.

Early in September, Sadia--by then 14 weeks pregnant--and a relative were ‘pushed back’ into Bangladesh by the Assam police, who claimed that they were Bangladeshi infiltrators. All this while, she was awaiting a court order to terminate her pregnancy in Tripura, and was hoping that the accused, Shona Mia, would be arrested.

Sadia is registered as an asylum seeker with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees India (UNHCR India), and her refugee status was under consideration. Her relative is a registered refugee from Myanmar. Ideally, Sadia should not have faced issues to access a medical termination of pregnancy (MTP) in India as per existing law, but her status as an asylum seeker, the ongoing investigation into her rape case, and the lack of legal clarity on refugees--particularly in the background of the violent unrest in Bangladesh--made her case complicated.

“I want justice,” said Sadia, who is now back in Cox’s Bazar’s Kutupalong refugee camp. She had lived there earlier since her family escaped from Maungdaw, in west Myanmar’s Rakhine state, eight years ago, following violence and persecution. 

Rohingya Women's Struggles in Refugee Camps

When Sadia, the youngest of four sisters, was smuggled into India in February, she and her elderly parents were hoping that she could escape the deteriorating security conditions in the camps where nearly 500,000 Rohingya women and girls live.

She was around 11 when her family was forced to seek refuge in Bangladesh. In 2017, the former UN human rights chief, Zeid Ra‘ad al-Hussein, said that the situation faced by the community seems to be a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing”. Predominantly Muslim, Rohingya are an ethnic group that has not been officially recognised in Myanmar, and have faced waves of violence for decades, making them the world’s largest stateless population.

According to UNHCR data, there are 22,500 stateless Rohingya refugees and asylum seekers in India, which is 2% of the Rohingya population hosted by Bangladesh.

Though India does not have a domestic law on refugees and asylum seekers and is not a signatory to the 1951 UN convention on refugees and its 1967 protocol, it is however a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Under its provisions, India is bound to provide asylum to those who seek protection from persecution. In addition, judicial orders have provided some relief and filled some of the gaps in legislation, IndiaSpend reported in March 2022.

A 2018 UN post said that there were, in the Cox’s Bazar region, possibly thousands of cases of pregnancies as a result of rape during the violent repressesion in Myanmar that is “a source of silent anguish among the mothers and likely stigma f

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