"It is curious and somewhat inexplicable as to why there should be so many Rohingyas who have migrated to Jammu and Ladakh," Dasgupta asked. He also cited anomalies over data pertaining to the number of Rohingyas living in India.
The Jammu and Kashmir government data says there are approximately 5,700 Rohingyas in Jammu and 7,664 Rohingyas in Ladakh. The UN High Commission for Refugees, however, states there are 14,000 Rohingyas in the whole of India, while the Home Ministry estimates it at 40,000.
"Now to my mind…this is very, very suspicious. The suspicion arises not for humanitarian reasons or anything like that, but because of what the Bangladesh government has reported that there are at least three terrorist organizations among the Rohingyas," Dasgupta said.
The member also said that there has been evidence of Rohingya involvement in the blast in Bodh Gaya. More recently, in October 2016, one of the two militants killed in an encounter in Jammu and Kashmir, turned out to be from Myanmar.
He said Rohingya refugees have been "flaunting" Indian government-provided identity cards and urged the government to consider it urgently.
"It is a big conspiracy and the state government is responsible for this. More than 23,000 Rohingya Muslims have taken shelter in Jammu. Everybody in Jammu, be it Hindu or Muslim, is worried. A state-level delegation recently met Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh and expressed their concerns about the Rohingyas but didn't get any concrete assurance," Bhim Singh, the chief patron of the Jammu and Kashmir National Panthers' Party and former lawmaker, told Sputnik.
In fact, security agencies also see Rohingya Muslims as a security threat as Jammu region is close to the Pakistan border.
Rohingyas, who mainly live in Myanmar's Rakhine province, are fleeing their homeland due to persecution. About three to four million of them have fled to Bangladesh, India, Saudi Arabia