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[🇧🇩] Insurgencies in Myanmar. Implications for Bangladesh

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[🇧🇩] Insurgencies in Myanmar. Implications for Bangladesh
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Rohingya crisis threatens regional security: Yunus
Staff Correspondent 23 April, 2025, 15:53

1745454764795.png

Chief adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus, accompanied by Qatar deputy prime minister Sheikh Saoud bin Abdulrahman bin Hassan bin Ali Al-Thani, is given a ceremonial guard of honour by Qatar armed forces in Doha on Wednesday. | PID Photo

Bangladesh interim government’s chief adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus at a discussion on Wednesday in Qatar’s capital Doha said that prolonged stay of Rohingyas posed enormous challenges to Bangladesh and might affect regional security and stability if the crisis lingered further.

Calling upon Qatar to use its good offices in creating pressure on Myanmar for repatriation of the forcibly displaced Rohingyas to their homeland, he said that unfortunately, international attention had gradually been shifting from the Rohingya crisis due to various conflicts arising at different corners of the globe.

‘If the problem persists further, it may affect the security and stability of the entire region and jeopardise development initiatives,’ Yunus said while addressing the high-level roundtable on the ‘Social and Environmental Challenges around Forcibly Displaced Populations: The Case of the Rohingya’.

He said that the Rohignya crisis was not simply a humanitarian concern, it was rather a multidimensional challenge with social, economic, political and environmental implications.

He said that rise in criminal activities in the camps and attempts of illegal migration were clear signs of desperation among them.

Yunus called upon all concerned to work together ‘for humanity, for stability and for justice’.

He said that Bangladesh was currently hosting about 1.3 million forcibly displaced Myanmar nationals while 32,000 newborns were being added yearly as none of the displaced people from the Rakhine State could be returned after the outbreak of the crisis in 2017.

‘Despite numerous challenges and constraints, Bangladesh is giving shelter to such a huge number of Rohingyas only on humanitarian considerations. Bangladesh considers sustainable repatriation as the only solution to the current crisis,’ the chief adviser said.

On the recent situation in the Rakhine State, he said that the situation there had undergone dramatic changes.

‘The Arakan Army now controls the 271-kilometre Bangladesh-Myanmar Border and 14 of Rakhine’s 17 townships. As of February 2025, Rakhine’s total internally displaced population stood at 5,38,876 individuals,’ he said, adding that among them, 1,52,071 stateless Rohingya remained in 21 protracted camps and three villages.

He said that additionally, 3,86,805 people, mostly Rakhine, were newly displaced across 1,219 different sites, reflecting the ongoing humanitarian crisis in the region.

Due to the ongoing armed conflicts in Myanmar, fresh arrivals of Rohingyas in Bangladesh since November 2023 have crossed 1,00,000, Yunus said.

‘Since February 2024, being attacked by the Arakan Army, 909 Myanmar security personnel have taken refuge inside Bangladesh of their own volition. Among them, 875 were repatriated to Myanmar, with another 34 to be repatriated soon,’ he said, adding that funding under the Joint Response Plan for the Rohingya humanitarian crisis was decreasing.

He told the roundtable that Bangladesh would organise a ‘High-Level Conference on the Situation of Rohingya Muslims and Other Minorities in Myanmar’ under UN auspices, probably in September 2025 in New York.

Bangladesh expected high-level political participation and cooperation from Qatar in the conference, the chief adviser said.

‘Qatar can use its good offices to put pressure on Myanmar for starting the repatriation of Rohingya people without any further delay,’ Yunus said.

Underlining the need for a meaningful partnership, he said that given the renewed international geopolitical and geostrategic scenario, Qatar could strongly express its solidarity to resolve the issue and be proactive to engage the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation countries to raise more funds and impose pressure on the international community to advocate for the repatriation of the Rohingyas.

Yunus and Qatar Foundation chief executive officer Sheikha Hind bint Hamad Al Thani, also sister of Qatar Amir, and the host of Earthna Summit, joined the roundtable, the United News of Bangladesh reported from Doha.

As of March 19, out of the data of a total of 8,29,036 submitted by the Bangladesh government, as many as 2,39,056 people were verified by the Myanmar government, and among them, 1,76,198 people were cleared as ‘Persons who resided in Myanmar’ by the government of Myanmar, the UNB report mentioned.

Qatar was among the first few countries to immediately provide assistance and support after the onset of the Rohingyas crisis in 2017, the chief adviser mentioned.

He said the ongoing justice and accountability initiatives in the International Court of Justice, the investigation of the International Criminal Court, and the activities of the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar regarding the atrocities committed against Rohingyas were very crucial.

Bangladesh as state party of the UN and Rome Statute, he said, strongly believes crimes like genocide and crime against humanity should never go unpunished.

‘Attributing the crimes to Myanmar/officials of Myanmar will also be a crucial tool to build the confidence of Rohingyas for their repatriation to Rakhine,’ said the chief adviser.

Bangladesh foreign affairs adviser Md Touhid Hossain, energy adviser Fouzul Kabir Khan, national security adviser and high representative to chief adviser Khalilur

Rahman, SDGs affairs principal coordinator Lamiya Morshed and Bangladesh ambassador to Qatar Md Nazrul Islam were present, among others, at the discussion.​
 

Govt should have talked to political parties over ‘humanitarian corridor’ for Rakhine: Mirza Fakhrul
Correspondent Thakurgaon
Published: 28 Apr 2025, 23: 13

1745891869274.png

BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir addresses a rally in Thakurgaon sadar upazila on 28 April 2025 Prothom Alo

The interim government should have talked to the political parties before taking the decision in principle of allowing a “humanitarian corridor” for communications with Myanmar’s Rakhine state, Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir remarked Monday.

He further said this decision is involved with the country’s independence and sovereignty and future peace and stability of this region.

Mirza Fakhrul said this while speaking as the chief guest at a mass campaign at Jagannathpur union in Thakurgaon Sadar upazila in the evening.

“A news report today made me thoughtful. Bangladesh’s Foreign Adviser Mr. Touhid, he said, ‘We want to allow a humanitarian passage for communications with the Arakanese’. This is a tough thing, it is hard to make you understand. You cannot go there (Rakhine); but now we can go there through Chattogram in Bangladesh. We can go there and communicate (with them). Now they are allowing this humanitarian passage there to communicate.”

Mirza Fakhrul further said, “Let me explain the matter a little. Isn’t there a war going on in Gaza? Israel is only dropping bombs on Gaza, right? No one can go there. A road is being built from Jordan or Egypt and food and medicine from the United Nations are being sent to Gaza from that direction. It’s alright, it is necessary for humanitarian reasons. But what I am saying is, today Bangladesh has to reach the point where Bangladesh had to allow a humanitarian passage. This is a very big decision. Our independence, sovereignty and peace and stability of the region in the future are related to this decision.”

According to Mirza Fakhrul, the government should have talked to all political parties about this issue. Instead of talking about it, they (the government) are making unilateral decisions and giving space for humanitarian passage.

The BNP leader said they had no objection to helping people; they had no objection to the initiative that the United Nations had taken. But it must be with the support of all people.

Mentioning “we don’t want to become another Gaza”, Mirza Fakhrul further said, “We don’t want to get involved in another war. We don’t even want anyone to come here and create trouble for us. We’re already in a big crisis with the Rohingya. We think we should have discussed this before allowing this so that there would be no problems with granting passage.”

Mirza Fakhrul also spoke about the reform initiatives. He said the power of the prime minister was becoming like a king. “We need reforms in those spheres. That is why we have talked about 31-point reforms. But we also want the election to be held. We hope the conscience of the government will prevail. They have said they will try to hold the election from December to June. But what we want to say is, please say it clearly, when you will organise the election. Announce a roadmap.”

Thakurgaon district BNP leaders were also present there.​
 

Rohingyas fleeing Arakan Army persecution
13 lakh refugees now in Bangladesh

1745892747678.png

Rohingya refugees near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, in 2017. Photo: Reuters

Amid escalating violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State, Rohingyas are trespassing into Bangladesh every day, crossing the border allegedly to escape the brutality of Myanmar's rebel group, the Arakan Army (AA).

Rohingya sources said back in Rakhine State, they faced killings, enforced disappearances, torture and forced recruitment into the rebel group as human shields against junta forces and were used as forced labourers for construction works.

Md Mizanur Rahman, Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner (RRRC), said, "Currently, a large number of Rohingyas are fleeing from Rakhine State and taking shelter in various refugee camps in Cox's Bazar. Since November 2023 until now, 1.13 lakh Rohingyas have entered Bangladesh. Of them, most arrived since June last."

The RRRC said, "Speaking to the fleeing Rohingyas, we learnt that they are escaping to Bangladesh after facing persecution by the Arakan Army. In the homes they leave behind, people from other communities are settling. These accounts have been consistently shared by the fleeing Rohingyas. We have not been able to independently verify this information."

Official sources confirmed that Bangladesh authorities and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) have taken fingerprints of the 1.13 lakh Rohingyas who entered Bangladesh since November 2023.

With these new arrivals, the total number of Rohingyas officially sheltered in Bangladesh now stands at least 13 lakh.

To arrange accommodation for the new arrivals, UNHCR has sent a letter to Bangladesh. The letter was sent last week to the Office of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner.

Regarding the matter, Mizanur said, "We have received a letter from UNHCR requesting arrangements for the accommodation of more than one lakh new Rohingyas. We do not have space to build houses for such a large number."

"This effort to build new shelters will make Rohingya repatriation more difficult, as it will encourage more Rohingyas in Rakhine to come to Bangladesh," he added.

Md Zubair, chairman of Arakan Rohingya Society for Peace and Human Rights, said, "Arakan Army is carrying out atrocities against the Rohingyas living in Rakhine State. Rohingyas are called to Arakan Army camps and forced to work as labourers. They are picking Rohingyas for recruitment into their forces to fight against the military junta. They are also detaining many Rohingyas, accusing them of having links with the junta forces. Some of these Rohingyas were killed, and others, brutally tortured. Many Islamic scholars from the Rohingya community were victims of enforced disappearance.

"Recently, the Arakan Army has started evicting Rohingyas from their houses and resettling Rakhine people (Mogh) from other countries like Bangladesh, Nepal and India into those areas."

That is why Rohingyas are fleeing to Bangladesh, Zubair said.

He described the situation in Rakhine as dire and demanded immediate international intervention and investigation into the Rohingya persecution committed by the Arakan Army.

Until November 2023, around 1.2 million Rohingyas, most of whom fled a brutal military campaign by Myanmar's junta forces, had already taken shelter in Bangladesh.

Rohingyas alleged that during that time, Rakhine people also took part in the persecution alongside the Junta forces.

The Arakan Army, representing the Rakhine community, launched a campaign against the junta forces in November 2023. They announced victory over 80 percent of Rakhine State, capturing 14 of the 17 townships.

Following their victory, the entire 270-kilometre border with Bangladesh went under their control.

During the fighting between the AA and Junta forces, many Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh after allegedly being targeted by both sides through bombings, torture and killings.

After the Arakan Army established control over most of Rakhine State, the Rohingyas reportedly became victims of further torture killings, and enforced disappearances by the AA.​
 
রাখাইনে মানবিক করিডোর কি বাংলাদেশের জন্য নিরাপত্তা ঝুঁকি তৈরি করবে? (If Bangladesh allows a humanitarian corridor for the UN to help the Rohingya in Myanmar, it could pose a serious security threat for Bangladesh. More Rohingya may come to Bangladesh to escape Arakan Army's persecution.)


 

ROHINGYA CRISIS: Bangladesh engages with parties in Rakhine: UNHCR
Staff Correspondent 29 April, 2025, 23:20

1745972504653.png

File photo

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi on Tuesday told the UN Security Council that the Bangladesh interim government chose to engage with the parties to the conflict in the Rakhine state to pursue a solution to the Rohingya crisis that remained stagnant for the past eight years.

‘But there is now an opportunity to break this dangerous inertia. The interim government of Bangladesh has chosen to engage with the parties to the conflict in Rakhine State in pursuit of a solution there—where it rightly lies,’ said the UN Refugee Agency chief while addressing the UN Security Council in New York.

‘Many will immediately say that such a solution today is impossible for all the reasons we know: too much blood has been shed, discrimination continues, and there are too many competing interests to balance. Many will say that the root causes will never be effectively addressed, and that may well be the case,’ he added.

He expressed his hope that the Security Council would continue to focus robustly on the situation in Myanmar, including the plight of the Rohingyas, saying, he looked forward to the conference planned for September in New York.

‘But we have been down the path of stagnation for eight years in respect of the Rohingya situation—it is a dead end,’ said Filippo Grandi, adding that from the perspective of pursuing solutions to the Rohingya plight.

‘..and in order to start recreating conditions for the return of refugees, dialogue with all parties is a critical first step so that humanitarian agencies, including UNHCR can reestablish their presence and resume providing desperately needed humanitarian relief—safely and freely,’ he added.

‘That, in turn, would provide a basis on which to restart discussions on the eventual return of displaced Rohingya—I stress: voluntarily, in safety and dignity—once the security situation in Rakhine allows, and from where other legal rights could also be pursued,’ he said.

‘For the last eight years, for example, stagnation has defined the response in Myanmar. The fighting between the Tatmadaw and different armed groups has caused immense suffering and large-scale displacement throughout the country and the region,’ he mentioned.

The plight of the Rohingya minority, in particular, has become even worse. Fighting in Rakhine State with the Arakan Army has been particularly vicious— 1.2 million Rohingya are refugees today, mostly in Bangladesh, in the camps around Cox’s Bazaar, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

‘We must thank Bangladesh and its people for having provided them refuge over the years. But Rohingya refugees languish in the camps, without work, deprived of agency, entirely dependent on humanitarian aid, which grows ever more precarious,’ he said

The UN Security Council’s permanent members are China, France, Russian Federation, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and the current 10 non-permanent members elected for two-year terms by the General Assembly are— Algeria, Denmark, Greece, Guyana, Pakistan, Panama, Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, Slovenia and Somalia.​
 

Rohingyas fleeing Arakan Army persecution
13 lakh refugees now in Bangladesh

1745974786325.png

Rohingya refugees near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, in 2017. Photo: Reuters

Amid escalating violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State, Rohingyas are trespassing into Bangladesh every day, crossing the border allegedly to escape the brutality of Myanmar's rebel group, the Arakan Army (AA).

Rohingya sources said back in Rakhine State, they faced killings, enforced disappearances, torture and forced recruitment into the rebel group as human shields against junta forces and were used as forced labourers for construction works.

Md Mizanur Rahman, Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner (RRRC), said, "Currently, a large number of Rohingyas are fleeing from Rakhine State and taking shelter in various refugee camps in Cox's Bazar. Since November 2023 until now, 1.13 lakh Rohingyas have entered Bangladesh. Of them, most arrived since June last."

The RRRC said, "Speaking to the fleeing Rohingyas, we learnt that they are escaping to Bangladesh after facing persecution by the Arakan Army. In the homes they leave behind, people from other communities are settling. These accounts have been consistently shared by the fleeing Rohingyas. We have not been able to independently verify this information."

Official sources confirmed that Bangladesh authorities and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) have taken fingerprints of the 1.13 lakh Rohingyas who entered Bangladesh since November 2023.

With these new arrivals, the total number of Rohingyas officially sheltered in Bangladesh now stands at least 13 lakh.

To arrange accommodation for the new arrivals, UNHCR has sent a letter to Bangladesh. The letter was sent last week to the Office of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner.

Regarding the matter, Mizanur said, "We have received a letter from UNHCR requesting arrangements for the accommodation of more than one lakh new Rohingyas. We do not have space to build houses for such a large number."

"This effort to build new shelters will make Rohingya repatriation more difficult, as it will encourage more Rohingyas in Rakhine to come to Bangladesh," he added.

Md Zubair, chairman of Arakan Rohingya Society for Peace and Human Rights, said, "Arakan Army is carrying out atrocities against the Rohingyas living in Rakhine State. Rohingyas are called to Arakan Army camps and forced to work as labourers. They are picking Rohingyas for recruitment into their forces to fight against the military junta. They are also detaining many Rohingyas, accusing them of having links with the junta forces. Some of these Rohingyas were killed, and others, brutally tortured. Many Islamic scholars from the Rohingya community were victims of enforced disappearance.

"Recently, the Arakan Army has started evicting Rohingyas from their houses and resettling Rakhine people (Mogh) from other countries like Bangladesh, Nepal and India into those areas."

That is why Rohingyas are fleeing to Bangladesh, Zubair said.

He described the situation in Rakhine as dire and demanded immediate international intervention and investigation into the Rohingya persecution committed by the Arakan Army.

Until November 2023, around 1.2 million Rohingyas, most of whom fled a brutal military campaign by Myanmar's junta forces, had already taken shelter in Bangladesh.

Rohingyas alleged that during that time, Rakhine people also took part in the persecution alongside the Junta forces.

The Arakan Army, representing the Rakhine community, launched a campaign against the junta forces in November 2023. They announced victory over 80 percent of Rakhine State, capturing 14 of the 17 townships.

Following their victory, the entire 270-kilometre border with Bangladesh went under their control.

During the fighting between the AA and Junta forces, many Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh after allegedly being targeted by both sides through bombings, torture and killings.

After the Arakan Army established control over most of Rakhine State, the Rohingyas reportedly became victims of further torture killings, and enforced disappearances by the AA.​
 

UNHCR for sheltering 1.13 lakh more Rohingyas
Staff Correspondent 30 April, 2025, 23:45

1746059484033.png


The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has recently pressed the Office of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner to ensure accommodation of 1.13 lakh more Rohingyas amid uncertainty of repatriation.

RRRC officials said that Rohingyas continued to enter Bangladesh as conflicts in Myanmar’s Rakhine state went on.

‘We received a letter from the UNHCR in the past week about ensuring accommodation of 1.13 lakh more Rohingyas who entered Bangladesh between November 2023 and April 27, 2025,’ RRRC top official Mohammed Mizanur Rahman told New Age on Tuesday.

Mizanur said that accommodating new arrivals of Rohingyas was impossible in the camps in Ukhiya and Teknaf upazilas in Cox’s Bazar.

He said that they had taken fingerprints of 1.13 lakh Rohingyas but yet to collect their iris images.

Mizanur also said that many newly arriving Rohingyas were staying at their relatives, learning centres and under the open sky. Some were living outside the camps.

Local people said that new arrivals were now living in villages and Cox’s Bazar town.

Ekramul Karim Bablu, a local resident at Balukhali in Ukhiya, told New Age that many Rohingyas were living outside the camps, in villages and towns.

‘We, the local people, are now cornered as the pressure of Rohingyas is increasing,’ he said.

The Armed Police Battalion’s 16th Battalion commanding officer Kawser Shikdar, also an additional deputy inspector general of police, said that the Rohingyas were living in the camps in an extremely crammed condition with at least eight people living in a tiny room.

‘I don’t see any place to allow new arrivals in the camp. We need to create new sheds for them,’ Kawser.

Cox’s Bazar deputy commissioner Mohammad Salahuddin declined to comment on the accommodation of the new arrivals, saying that he had to first hold a meeting the RRRC.

Myanmar has identified 1,80,000 Rohingya refugees from a list of 8,00,000 sheltered in Bangladesh as eligible for repatriation, said a recent press release from the chief adviser’s press wing.

The information was disclosed on April 4 to Khalilur Rahman, high representative of the chief adviser of Bangladesh, by U Than Shew, deputy prime minister and foreign minister of Myanmar, at a meeting on the sidelines of the 6th summit of the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation, BIMSTEC in short, in Bangkok.

Many Rohingyas, however, have said that they are not willing to return to Rakhine until peace is restored.

Dhaka University international relations professor Syeda Rozana Rashid said that the repatriation process would not start overnight until a conducive environment for relocation in Myanmar was restored.

‘Our main goal is to repatriate them and we have been trying this for the past eight years. It will take time and let’s see what happens next,’ said Rozana, having more than twenty years of research experience on forced and voluntary migration.

She said that the Rohingya people could not be sent in Rakhine until the current volatile situation in which killings, setting fire to homes and tortures were being perpetrated, forcing them to cross the border to enter Bangladesh with whatever means they could manage.

The Rohingyas are using land and river routes along the border in Ukhiya and Teknaf upazilas in Cox’s Bazar and Naikhongchhari upazila in Bandarban to reach Bangladesh, community people and officials in Cox’s Bazar said. To enter Bangladesh they are paying local boatmen and brokers on both sides of the border.

More than 1.3 million (13 lakh) Myanmar nationals of the Rohingya community fled to Bangladesh amid brutal atrocities by the Myanmar military since 2017, according to government data.

On March 7, the United Nations World Food Programme in a press release warned of a critical funding shortfall for its emergency response operations in Bangladesh that might affect over one million displaced Rohingyas.

The monthly rations must be halved to $6 per person, down from $12.50 per person, it said.

RRRC chief Mizanur said that the UN shifted from its previous position and extended to providing $12 for per person till August this year.

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi on Tuesday told the UN Security Council that the Bangladesh interim government chose to engage with the parties to the conflict in the Rakhine state to pursue a solution to the Rohingya crisis that remained stagnant for the past eight years.​
 

ROHINGYA CRISIS: Bangladesh engages with parties in Rakhine: UNHCR
Staff Correspondent 29 April, 2025, 23:20

1746059758037.png

File photo

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi on Tuesday told the UN Security Council that the Bangladesh interim government chose to engage with the parties to the conflict in the Rakhine state to pursue a solution to the Rohingya crisis that remained stagnant for the past eight years.

‘But there is now an opportunity to break this dangerous inertia. The interim government of Bangladesh has chosen to engage with the parties to the conflict in Rakhine State in pursuit of a solution there—where it rightly lies,’ said the UN Refugee Agency chief while addressing the UN Security Council in New York.

‘Many will immediately say that such a solution today is impossible for all the reasons we know: too much blood has been shed, discrimination continues, and there are too many competing interests to balance. Many will say that the root causes will never be effectively addressed, and that may well be the case,’ he added.

He expressed his hope that the Security Council would continue to focus robustly on the situation in Myanmar, including the plight of the Rohingyas, saying, he looked forward to the conference planned for September in New York.

‘But we have been down the path of stagnation for eight years in respect of the Rohingya situation—it is a dead end,’ said Filippo Grandi, adding that from the perspective of pursuing solutions to the Rohingya plight.

‘..and in order to start recreating conditions for the return of refugees, dialogue with all parties is a critical first step so that humanitarian agencies, including UNHCR can reestablish their presence and resume providing desperately needed humanitarian relief—safely and freely,’ he added.

‘That, in turn, would provide a basis on which to restart discussions on the eventual return of displaced Rohingya—I stress: voluntarily, in safety and dignity—once the security situation in Rakhine allows, and from where other legal rights could also be pursued,’ he said.

‘For the last eight years, for example, stagnation has defined the response in Myanmar. The fighting between the Tatmadaw and different armed groups has caused immense suffering and large-scale displacement throughout the country and the region,’ he mentioned.

The plight of the Rohingya minority, in particular, has become even worse. Fighting in Rakhine State with the Arakan Army has been particularly vicious— 1.2 million Rohingya are refugees today, mostly in Bangladesh, in the camps around Cox’s Bazaar, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

‘We must thank Bangladesh and its people for having provided them refuge over the years. But Rohingya refugees languish in the camps, without work, deprived of agency, entirely dependent on humanitarian aid, which grows ever more precarious,’ he said

The UN Security Council’s permanent members are China, France, Russian Federation, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and the current 10 non-permanent members elected for two-year terms by the General Assembly are— Algeria, Denmark, Greece, Guyana, Pakistan, Panama, Republic of Korea, Sierra Leone, Slovenia and Somalia.​
 

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