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Lt Col Saw Zarya Lwin - the BGP commanding officer at Rakhine state’s Tambru, otherwise known as Taung Pyo Letwe on the Myanmar side - led the seven-member BGP delegation at the meeting after visiting the border areas in the morning. Lt Col Monzurul led a same-sized BGB delegation. The situation at the border and in the no man’s land between Bangladesh’s Konarpara and Myanmar’s Tambru was normal on Friday, but Myanmar military personnel were seen until the afternoon. Their number, however, was less than Thursday.

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Several senior BGB officials, who declined to be named, also confirmed that fresh troops had arrived at the border area on Friday. The BGB also took up positions along the border but the situation had not deteriorated by evening. Lt Col Monzurul earlier in the day had said they also installed three closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras at Tambru border area to monitor Myanmar army's movements and the Rohingyas stuck in the no man's land. There were no CCTV cameras in the border before.

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The 6,500 refugees of the no man’s land are reportedly among the 8,032 named in the initial repatriation list, which the Bangladesh government handed over to Myanmar last month. BGP and army men over the past one month have also been issuing warnings using loudspeakers and asking the refugees to leave that area. Bangladeshi locals at Gumdum’s Tambru, Konarpara, and other adjacent areas said the military action had caused them to become tense, and that such sudden movement from Myanmar security forces may hamper the repatriation process.
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The Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Thursday also summoned the newly-appointed Myanmar Ambassador in Dhaka, Lwin Oo, over his country’s military build-up and handed him a note verbale. The Myanmar security forces’ move came two days after three Nobel Peace laureates – Shirin Ebadi of Iran, Tawakkol Karman of Yemen, and Mairead Maguire of Northern Ireland – visited the Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazar and Tambru border point. More than 700,000 Rohingya refugees have crossed into Bangladesh since a military crackdown began in late August 2017 following an insurgent attack in Rakhine state. They joined more than 400,000 Rohingyas who were already living in refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar.Our Cox’s Bazar correspondent Abdul Aziz and Bandarban correspondent S Bashu Das contributed to this article