Bangladesh says it has agreed a timeframe with Myanmar for repatriating hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who fled an army crackdown last year.
Myanmar has agreed to accept 1,500 Rohingya every week, Bangladesh says, adding that it aims to return all of them to Myanmar within two years.
Over 650,000 Rohingya have fled to neighbouring Bangladesh since violence erupted in Rakhine state in August.
Aid agencies have raised concerns about forcibly repatriating them.
According to Reuters, the agreement did not specify when the process would begin but said Myanmar would provide temporary shelter to those returning and later build houses for them.
The two sides agreed on a repatriation deal last November and have now met in Myanmar’s capital Naypyidaw to finalise the details.
Bangladeshi foreign secretary Md Shahidul Haque told BBC Bangla that the government had wanted Myanmar to accept 15,000 Rohingya each week – however, they eventually settled on 300 a day – 1,500 per week.
Both sides would review the agreement in three months, he added.
Under the current agreement, about 156,000 Rohingya would be repatriated in two years – far short of the 650,000 who have taken recently taken refuge in Bangladesh.
When the initial deal was signed, Amnesty International said it doubted there could be safe or dignified returns “while a system of apartheid remains” and added that it “hoped those who do not want to go home are not forced to do so”.
The Rohingya are a stateless minority in Myanmar, also known as Burma.
Hugh numbers have fled to Bangladesh after deadly Rohingya attacks on police posts prompted a military crackdown in Rakhine state in late August.
The crisis has been described as ethnic cleansing by the UN and the US.
Despite widespread accusations of human rights violations, Myanmar has consistently denied persecuting its Rohingya minority.
Source: BBC