I think the first thing the international community needs to do is have a common agenda to present to the Government of Myanmar to make sure that the return is possible and safe. At the moment, I think some of the steps that have been taken are far from satisfactory.
I have met the Rohingya population in Bangladesh, and I don't see any confidence in that population that they will be able to return and live there with safety. Myanmar is going through an ethnic conflict in any case; I think the Rohingya issue is deeper than just the Rohingya and the prejudice against the Rohingya population.
I think lengthy work needs to be done with Myanmar. The problem for the international community and for me as an Elder, as part of a group that's working on this, is also that these refugees cannot stay in Bangladesh for a long time. There also we see a lot of problems happening.
I think the best thing is diplomatic overtures with the Government of Myanmar and more pressure on the civilian government to enforce some kind of restraint on the military in the provinces where these ethnic conflicts take place. The Rohingya population perhaps may be safer in larger cities, but it is in those very areas that these people have fled from that the danger still exists.