Imo)
Parbatya Chattagrani Jana Santhati Sarni i
(United Peoples Party)
Central Office: Kalyanpur, Rangamati, Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh
Tel: +88-0351-61248, E-mail: pejss.org@gmail.eorn / pejss®hotmail.com Web: www.pejss-cht.org
United Nations Human Rights Council
Forum on Minority Issues
Ninth session, 24-25 November 2016
Agenda — 3 Respecting Minority Rights as a means of preventing or mitigating the impact
of humanitarian crises
StateMent by:
Tit inad Chakrna
<trijinadchakmal 5@gmail.com>
Parbatya Chattagrarn Jana Samhati Samiti (POW
Honourable Chairperson, distinguished delegates, indigenous and minority representatives,
The agenda "Recovering from a crisis: ensuring durable solutions" is of serious concern to indigenous
peoples of Bangladesh, as we are daily confronted by conflicts and humanitarian crisis in our
homelands.
The Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) is one of crucial regions in Bangladesh in terms of conflicts and
humanitarian crisis. Indigenous Jumma peoples of the CHT have regularly spoken about their
problems relating to conflicts, militarization and population transfer perpetrated upon them since
1970s.
The indigenous Jumma peoples have been struggling for decades long to safeguard their national
existence and to establish right to self-determination. After a long struggle, they have compelled the
government of Bangladesh to engage in negotiations resulting in the signing the 'CHT Accord' on 2nd
December 1997 in order to resolve the CHT crisis through peaceful and political means. The CHT
Accord had ended the decades long fierce armed conflict between the Jumma peoples and
government of Bangladesh.
However, many crucial provisions of the CHT Accord, including on de-militarization, self-rule
government, return of lands forcibly taken over by settlers, rehabilitation of Jumma refugees and
internally displaced families, mixed policing, preservation of Jumma-inhabited characteristics of CHT
region and so forth, remain unitnplemented. Although the former PCJSS guerillas have laid down their
arms, a sustainable peace and recovering from the crisis is yet to achieved and hence durable
solutions is also yet to be ensured.
The Jumma people are still under military rule through the Operation Uttoron (Upliftment) which was
imposed in 2001 after signing the CHT Accord. Under this Operation Uttoron, the military forces can
commit any kind of atrocity with impunity. Hundreds of military camps still remain in CHT, and
non-indigenous settlers continue to illegally and forcefully occupy