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A Crime against Humanity

12:00 AM, October 25, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:52 AM, October 25, 2017
The fastest growing refugee crisis
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On August 25 this year, hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas started fleeing military operations in Myanmar’s Rakhine State and crossing the border to take shelter in Bangladesh. And the exodus continues. So far, there is no visible progress in the repatriation process.

With the Rohingyas streaming into Bangladesh fleeing a brutal crackdown in Myanmar's Rakhine State, the UN rights body chief denounced the atrocities as “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing”. There have been multiple reports of security forces and local vigilantes burning Rohingya villages, shooting unarmed civilians and raping women.

Myanmar's de facto leader Suu Kyi and the military keep facing the condemnation of the global community amid calls for an end to the violence against one of the most persecuted minority groups in the world. The Bangladesh government and the local community in Cox's Bazar bordering Rakhine State have been widely praised for the response to the unprecedented influx, especially for keeping the border open. However, a lot of challenges lie ahead as the repatriation of the refugees doesn't look like something that's going to happen anytime soon.
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“Bangladesh is not a rich country ... but if we can feed 160 million people, another 500 or 700,000 people, we can do it."
PRIME MINISTER SHEIKH HASINA

“As we witness the unfolding horror we pray for you [Suu Kyi] to be courageous and resilient again... for you to speak out for justice, human rights and the unity of your people."
ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU

“The situation has spiralled into the world's fastest developing refugee emergency, a humanitarian and human rights nightmare."
UN SECRETARY GENERAL ANTONIO GUTERRES
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The Rohingya Crisis in Numbers

By UNITED NATIONS OCHA
OCTOBER 23RD, 2017
1982
The year a law was passed by Myanmar’s Government identifying 135 recognized 'national ethnic groups' that could claim citizenship. The Muslim Rohingya were not one of these groups, effectively rendering them stateless. They are now the largest stateless population in the world. In Rakhine State, their freedom of movement is severely restricted and they have been denied access to local schools, hospitals and markets.
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25 August 2017
Attacks by Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army on border posts prompt a violent response by Myanmar security forces, leading 600,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh as of 20 October 2017.
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809,000
The number of Rohingya refugees who have fled violence and persecution in Myanmar to seek refuge in Bangladesh, including 603,000 who have arrived since 25 August. They report horrific stories of mass killings, arson, rape and abuse.
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288
The number of Rohingya villages that Human Rights Watch estimates have been destroyed since 25 August, according to satellite data. The UN’s Human Rights chief, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein has described the Government’s operations in northern Rakhine State as a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”
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$434 million
Humanitarian agencies are calling for $434 million in the Rohingya refugee crisis response plan to assist 1.2 million people - mainly Rohingya refugees but also host communities in Bangladesh – with emergency relief and protection. Priorities are clean water and sanitation, shelter, food, and counselling services to help heal deeply traumatized children, women and men.
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29%
As of 24 October, the Rohingya humanitarian response plan had received $130 million, or 29 per cent of requirements. Donors have pledged 76 per cent of the $434 million appeal at a 23rd October pledging event. This money now urgently needs to be turned into commitments.
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10,333
The average number of Rohingya refugees who have crossed into Bangladesh daily since 25 August. Most are taking refuge in Kutupalong, and Kutupalong Expansion - makeshift camps that have been set up in Cox’s Bazar district on land made available by the Government of Bangladesh.
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700,487
In Cox’s Bazar, the World Health Organization and the Government of Bangladesh have administered oral cholera vaccinations to more than 700,000 people as of 29 October, making this the second largest oral cholera vaccination campaign ever.
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536,000
The total number of people reached by aid agencies with food assistance, though funding shortages have meant that one third of these people received only partial rations. Agencies are also providing clean water, sanitation services, healthcare, shelter materials, essentials like cooking equipment and jerry cans, and counselling services for the traumatized.
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https://unocha.exposure.co/the-rohi...l&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
 
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Rohingya girls under 10 raped while fleeing Myanmar, charity says
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Rohingya children in Cox’s Bazar, across the border from Myanmar in Bangladesh. Photograph: Abir Abdullah/EPA
By Fiona MacGregor
The Guardian
October 25, 2017
Médecins Sans Frontières says more than half the girls it has treated after sexual assaults are under 18
Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh
-- Rohingya children, some of them under 10 years old, are receiving treatment for rape in camps on the Bangladesh border, according to medics who say that young refugees account for half of those sexually assaulted while fleeing violence in Myanmar.

Médecins Sans Frontières says dozens of Rohingya girls have been given medical and psychological support at its Kutupalong health facility’s sexual and reproductive health unit – a specialist clinic for survivors of sexual assault based in the largest refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar.

Of those fleeing Rakhine state who come to the clinic for treatment relating to rape, “about 50% are aged 18 or under, including one girl who was nine years old and several others under the age of 10”, an MSF spokesperson said.

The organisation stressed this was just a fraction of those believed to have been sexually assaulted and raped since military operations began on 25 August, as most survivors faced practical and cultural barriers to accessing treatment.

“Women and girls often don’t seek medical care for sexual violence due to the stigma, shame and fear of being blamed for what’s happened to them,” said Aerlyn Pfeil, an MSF midwife focusing on support for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) in Cox’s Bazar.

In the last week a nine-year-old girl was among the new arrivals who received medical treatment after being raped, as military violence against Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine continues.

Rohingya refugees have repeatedly described incidents of gang rape and sexual assaults by the Myanmar army during military operations the UN has said amount to ethnic cleansing, but this is the first timeevidence of a large number of children being targeted has emerged.

According to another SGBV medical specialist working in the camps, who asked not to be named because of patient privacy, most cases she has dealt with involve the army gathering all the women and girls in a village in one place and picking “the most beautiful” to be taken away and raped, either by individual soldiers or groups.

“A lot of them are just 12 or 13 years old,” she said.
One recent case she dealt with involved a child under 10 with severe bleeding who had been raped by three soldiers, she said.

Her account backs the stories of numerous refugees who describe similar incidents of mass rape, with many saying some victims were subsequently killed.

After speaking to psychological experts in the camps who warned such interviews could increase trauma for victims, the Guardian did not seek to speak directly to child rape survivors.

However, during an interview with a 27-year-old woman from the Buthidaung area of Rakhine, who said her husband and father were rounded up and killed by the Myanmar military shortly after 25 August, it emerged the woman’s 14-year-old sister had been raped during the attack.

“The military put all the male people to one side and took all the female people into the jungle,” she said, adding that the soldiers then selected some girls and women.
“I cried when they took away my little sister, but I couldn’t stop them.
“They tortured and raped many girls and women. When they stopped and left I went looking for my sister and saw many bodies on the ground. When I found my sister I didn’t know if she was alive or dead, but she was breathing.

“She was bleeding a lot so I carried her to a little river and washed her. Then I took her on my shoulders till I found a small medical clinic [in Rakhine] and got some medicine for her.”
The woman said her sister had later told her she had been raped by two soldiers and by one of the ethnic Rakhine Buddhist civilians who had been involved in the attack on their village.
She said she had not heard about the specialist clinics in the camp and that her sister had not received any support or medical care since reaching Bangladesh.

“What I’m finding is that many of the survivors I’ve met are recent arrivals from Myanmar and have not previously been aware that there are specific medical services, or any medical services at all, available to them,” said Pfeil.

“When I’ve been speaking to survivors of sexual violence, one of the more heartbreaking and common requests I’ve had is for new cloth skirts, because [weeks] later, they’re still wearing the same clothes they were raped or assaulted in.”

More than 600,000 people have fled from Myanmar into Bangladesh since 25 August and are now struggling to survive in terrible conditions in sprawling makeshift camps.
Human Rights Watch said last week:
“The Burmese military has clearly used rape as one of a range of horrific methods of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya.”
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/10/rohingya-girls-under-10-raped-while.html
 
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Channel 4 News
21 mins ·
Shocking testimony from Rohinghya women about rape and assault by soldiers in the Myanmar military.
Jonathan Miller reports from a refugee camp in south eastern Bangladesh where women who have fled across the border.
Myanmar's military has denied claims that they raped women.
This report contains distressing testimony about sexual violence.

 
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07:09 PM, October 27, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 07:21 PM, October 27, 2017
"Consistent" pattern of crimes against Myanmar's Rohingya, UN experts say
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Rohingya refugees who crossed the border from Myanmar this week cry as they take shelter at the Seagull Primary School in Kutupalong refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, October 27, 2017. Photo: Reuters
Reuters, Geneva
Rohingya refugees fleeing Myanmar have testified that a "consistent, methodical pattern" of killings, torture, rape and arson is taking place, United Nations human rights investigators said on Friday after a first mission to Bangladesh.
The fact-finding team, led by former Indonesian attorney general Marzuki Darusman, said the death toll from the Myanmar army's crackdown following Rohingya insurgent attacks on August 25 was unknown, but "may turn out to be extremely high".

"We have heard many accounts from people from many different villages across northern Rakhine state. They point to a consistent, methodical pattern of actions resulting in gross human rights violations affecting hundreds of thousands of people," Darusman said in a statement.

The team of three independent experts spent six days interviewing some of the 600,000 Rohingya from Myanmar's northern Rakhine state who are in refugee camps near Cox's Bazar. An advance team of UN rights officers have been conducting comprehensive interviews for weeks, it said.

"We are deeply disturbed at the end of this visit," Darusman said.

Radhika Coomaraswamy, another member and veteran UN human rights investigator, said she was left "shaken and angry" by the testimonies.

"The accounts of sexual violence that I heard from victims are some of the most horrendous I have heard in my long experience in dealing with this issue in many crisis situations," she said. "One could see the trauma in the eyes of the women I interviewed. When proven, this kind of abuse must never be allowed to go unpunished."

The UN team, which was established by the UN Human Rights Council in March, renewed its appeal for access to Rakhine state and for talks with the Myanmar government and military to "establish the facts".

The third member, Christopher Sidoti, said that Rohingyas must be allowed to return to Rakhine if they wish, but only after mechanisms are put in place to ensure their safety.
"That may require the placement of international human rights monitors in Rakhine State," he said.
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...mar-rohingya-refugee-un-unhrc-experts-1482613
 
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The lone survivors in the Rohingya camps
Tarek Mahmud
Published at 07:34 PM October 27, 2017
Last updated at 10:47 PM October 27, 2017
Rohingya-lone-survivors-featured-EDITED-690x450.jpg

A Rohingya woman waits to get herself registered for humanitarian aid at the Kutupalong refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, on October 23, 2017 Reuters
There are Rohingya refugees living in the camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh who are the sole survivors in their families; the rest could not escape the military atrocities in Rakhine
Words alone fail to describe the harrowing experience endured by the Rohingyas during the coordinated ethnic cleansing by the Myanmar army in Rakhine State since August.

Visiting the 12 refugee camps in Ukhiya and Teknaf for over a week, this correspondent reached out to some of the lone survivors who had lost most, if not all, of their immediate family members and other relatives in the atrocities.

Sixty-year-old Mukinnesha was unable to control her tears as she described losing her whole family in just under an hour on August 27, the Sunday before Eid-ul-Azha.

“The Myanmar army and their associates – Moghs – attacked our house around midday, forcibly bringing out my husband, Abdus Salam, and my two sons and me,” said Mukinnesha, who came from Rabailya village under Maungdaw township of Rakhine state.
Final-Mukhinnesha.jpg

“Then they set fire to our wooden house. A soldier started beating up my husband indiscriminately and later shot him in the head in front of me. Later, as they were taking away my sons they threatened me, telling me to leave the country.”

Mukinnesha said that when she was fleeing her village later the same day, some neighbours told her they had seen the bodies of her sons – Rafiq and Shafiq – lying in a ditch.

“I just cried – for my sons, for my husband. What could I have done but flee? I somehow saved my life coming to Bangladesh,” she said.

After concluding her story, Mukinnesha, who now resides at Madhurchara area of Kutupalong Rohingya camp, tried to control her emotions and expressed her pain, saying: “Now I have to live the rest of my life alone, depending on other people.”

Shahidul Amin used to reside in Maungdaw’s Deultoli with his family but is now an orphan, living under the supervision of a foreign aid organisation in Kutupalong. He is only ten years old.

When asked about his family, Shahidul went quiet for while and then started weeping as he recalled the day the Myanmar army killed his family shortly before Eid-ul-Azha.

“When the army attacked in the morning, I, along with three of my friends, were collecting firewood,” he said. “Suddenly, we heard gunshots and the four of us hid behind a bush, passing almost the whole day there out of fear of getting killed. In the evening, we rushed to our houses.

“I can never forget what I saw that day – my house was burning, the cattle shed empty, and on the yard were kept the bodies of my father, mother and my four brothers. Later, I called for my sisters but no one responded.

“I did not know what to do then, so after half an hour, I fled the area with other locals as the Moghs were attacking. The last I heard (of my sisters) was that they were killed after abuse.”

The ill-fated boy then endured a 15-day walk just to reach the relative safety of Balukhali in Ukhiya.

There are stories pouring out of Rakhine state that are even more horrifying than Mukinnesha or Shahidul’s.

This correspondent talked to Sebika Begum’s (pseudonym), a resident of Maungdaw’s Tulatoli area. Raped, abused, tortured and left to die, Sebika is the only living member of her family after the Myanmar army burned the rest in front of her.

“The army killed all 18 members of my family in a night, throwing them – alive – into the fire that they had set to our house,” she said.

“My father Ali Ahmed had begged them for mercy but instead, they stabbed him with the bayonet attached to their rifles and threw him in the fire.

“They threw my mother Feroza Khatun, five brothers, five cousins, three uncles and their wives into the fire and waited there until they all died. I saw them burn right in front of me.
Final-Sebika-Begum.jpg

“Later, they took me to their den and raped me one by one. When I protested, they tortured me and threatened to kill me. After two days, they left me to die but I managed to flee Myanmar and come to Kutupalong.”

Buthidaung’s Fatema fled Myanmar in mid-October with her village people. She did not talk with this correspondent but to one of her villagers, Sufia Khatun, who said she Fatema had lost her husband, five sons and two daughters as the military indiscriminately fired at them and the Moghs burned their house.

“We found her (Fatema) unconscious but unhurt, lying beside the bodies of her family members,” Sufia said. “She is luckily to be alive. After the incident, she does not talk much unless it is important.”
FInal-Mizan.jpg

An orphan since childhood, Mizan Ali, 25, who resided in Buthidaung’s Sherangdaung, made a living through farming on the land he inherited from his parents.

Mizan married his neighbour, also called Fatema, a few months before the latest atrocities began. On the night of August 23, army men picked-up his wife from their house, and she was never to be found again.

“She was the only one I had in my life, but I lost her,” he said.

“Many villagers said the army men have killed her after raping her. I did look for her but never found her. Finally, after few days of the incident, I was compelled to leave my house and my land as I received repeated threats of death from the Moghs.”

Mizan, who came to Balukhali camp about a month ago, said he had heard from his neighbouring villagers – who reached the camp recently – that the army and the Moghs had grabbed all the land on which they used to reside.

For Jafor Alam, who resided in Maungdaw’s Boro Gowji Bil area, maybe a tough but happy life was waiting just across the Naf River as he, along with his wife and two kids, managed to reach a boat that was leaving for Bangladesh.

That was before indiscriminate gunshots from the Myanmar army sank the boat.

“I lost everyone to the river; the bodies of my sons and wife were found three days after the incident,” said Jafor, who is now living at Leda Rohingya Camp of Teknaf upazila. “What was my fault? We were fleeing Myanmar leaving all our belongings.”
FInal-Ahad.jpg

Three-year-old Ahad was found crying in the yard of his house as he could not find his parents, said Rajia Begum, who is Ahad’s distant grandmother in relation.

“I think the boy’s parents were killed by the Myanmar army,” she said. “I saw him in the yard when I was fleeing with my family. I could not just leave him there, so I brought him with me.”

Like Ahad, the Bangladesh government has found 23,487 orphan children who have lost their families to the torture and killings of the Myanmar army and the Moghs.

Saiful Islam, the general secretary of Kutupalong Registered Refugee Camp, said: “These examples of tortures, killings, rapes and oppression are almost the same for all who are sheltered here in the camps. But the pain of a person who has lost all members of his or her family are more than the others.”

Since late August, the Myanmar army and the Moghs have burned entire villages to the ground and killed, raped and tortured the inhabitants, forcing more than 605,000 Rohingyas to seek refuge in neighbouring Bangladesh in what the UN has described as a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

The Rohingya are a stateless community and one of the most persecuted minorities. Myanmar does not recognise Rohingya Muslims as citizens, and forces them to live in squalid camps under apartheid-like conditions.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/south-asia/2017/10/27/lone-survivors-rohingya-camps/
 
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The lone survivors in the Rohingya camps
Tarek Mahmud
Published at 07:34 PM October 27, 2017
Last updated at 10:47 PM October 27, 2017
Rohingya-lone-survivors-featured-EDITED-690x450.jpg

A Rohingya woman waits to get herself registered for humanitarian aid at the Kutupalong refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, on October 23, 2017 Reuters
There are Rohingya refugees living in the camps in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh who are the sole survivors in their families; the rest could not escape the military atrocities in Rakhine
Words alone fail to describe the harrowing experience endured by the Rohingyas during the coordinated ethnic cleansing by the Myanmar army in Rakhine State since August.

Visiting the 12 refugee camps in Ukhiya and Teknaf for over a week, this correspondent reached out to some of the lone survivors who had lost most, if not all, of their immediate family members and other relatives in the atrocities.

Sixty-year-old Mukinnesha was unable to control her tears as she described losing her whole family in just under an hour on August 27, the Sunday before Eid-ul-Azha.

“The Myanmar army and their associates – Moghs – attacked our house around midday, forcibly bringing out my husband, Abdus Salam, and my two sons and me,” said Mukinnesha, who came from Rabailya village under Maungdaw township of Rakhine state.
Final-Mukhinnesha.jpg

“Then they set fire to our wooden house. A soldier started beating up my husband indiscriminately and later shot him in the head in front of me. Later, as they were taking away my sons they threatened me, telling me to leave the country.”

Mukinnesha said that when she was fleeing her village later the same day, some neighbours told her they had seen the bodies of her sons – Rafiq and Shafiq – lying in a ditch.

“I just cried – for my sons, for my husband. What could I have done but flee? I somehow saved my life coming to Bangladesh,” she said.

After concluding her story, Mukinnesha, who now resides at Madhurchara area of Kutupalong Rohingya camp, tried to control her emotions and expressed her pain, saying: “Now I have to live the rest of my life alone, depending on other people.”

Shahidul Amin used to reside in Maungdaw’s Deultoli with his family but is now an orphan, living under the supervision of a foreign aid organisation in Kutupalong. He is only ten years old.

When asked about his family, Shahidul went quiet for while and then started weeping as he recalled the day the Myanmar army killed his family shortly before Eid-ul-Azha.

“When the army attacked in the morning, I, along with three of my friends, were collecting firewood,” he said. “Suddenly, we heard gunshots and the four of us hid behind a bush, passing almost the whole day there out of fear of getting killed. In the evening, we rushed to our houses.

“I can never forget what I saw that day – my house was burning, the cattle shed empty, and on the yard were kept the bodies of my father, mother and my four brothers. Later, I called for my sisters but no one responded.

“I did not know what to do then, so after half an hour, I fled the area with other locals as the Moghs were attacking. The last I heard (of my sisters) was that they were killed after abuse.”

The ill-fated boy then endured a 15-day walk just to reach the relative safety of Balukhali in Ukhiya.

There are stories pouring out of Rakhine state that are even more horrifying than Mukinnesha or Shahidul’s.

This correspondent talked to Sebika Begum’s (pseudonym), a resident of Maungdaw’s Tulatoli area. Raped, abused, tortured and left to die, Sebika is the only living member of her family after the Myanmar army burned the rest in front of her.

“The army killed all 18 members of my family in a night, throwing them – alive – into the fire that they had set to our house,” she said.

“My father Ali Ahmed had begged them for mercy but instead, they stabbed him with the bayonet attached to their rifles and threw him in the fire.

“They threw my mother Feroza Khatun, five brothers, five cousins, three uncles and their wives into the fire and waited there until they all died. I saw them burn right in front of me.
Final-Sebika-Begum.jpg

“Later, they took me to their den and raped me one by one. When I protested, they tortured me and threatened to kill me. After two days, they left me to die but I managed to flee Myanmar and come to Kutupalong.”

Buthidaung’s Fatema fled Myanmar in mid-October with her village people. She did not talk with this correspondent but to one of her villagers, Sufia Khatun, who said she Fatema had lost her husband, five sons and two daughters as the military indiscriminately fired at them and the Moghs burned their house.

“We found her (Fatema) unconscious but unhurt, lying beside the bodies of her family members,” Sufia said. “She is luckily to be alive. After the incident, she does not talk much unless it is important.”
FInal-Mizan.jpg

An orphan since childhood, Mizan Ali, 25, who resided in Buthidaung’s Sherangdaung, made a living through farming on the land he inherited from his parents.

Mizan married his neighbour, also called Fatema, a few months before the latest atrocities began. On the night of August 23, army men picked-up his wife from their house, and she was never to be found again.

“She was the only one I had in my life, but I lost her,” he said.

“Many villagers said the army men have killed her after raping her. I did look for her but never found her. Finally, after few days of the incident, I was compelled to leave my house and my land as I received repeated threats of death from the Moghs.”

Mizan, who came to Balukhali camp about a month ago, said he had heard from his neighbouring villagers – who reached the camp recently – that the army and the Moghs had grabbed all the land on which they used to reside.

For Jafor Alam, who resided in Maungdaw’s Boro Gowji Bil area, maybe a tough but happy life was waiting just across the Naf River as he, along with his wife and two kids, managed to reach a boat that was leaving for Bangladesh.

That was before indiscriminate gunshots from the Myanmar army sank the boat.

“I lost everyone to the river; the bodies of my sons and wife were found three days after the incident,” said Jafor, who is now living at Leda Rohingya Camp of Teknaf upazila. “What was my fault? We were fleeing Myanmar leaving all our belongings.”
FInal-Ahad.jpg

Three-year-old Ahad was found crying in the yard of his house as he could not find his parents, said Rajia Begum, who is Ahad’s distant grandmother in relation.

“I think the boy’s parents were killed by the Myanmar army,” she said. “I saw him in the yard when I was fleeing with my family. I could not just leave him there, so I brought him with me.”

Like Ahad, the Bangladesh government has found 23,487 orphan children who have lost their families to the torture and killings of the Myanmar army and the Moghs.

Saiful Islam, the general secretary of Kutupalong Registered Refugee Camp, said: “These examples of tortures, killings, rapes and oppression are almost the same for all who are sheltered here in the camps. But the pain of a person who has lost all members of his or her family are more than the others.”

Since late August, the Myanmar army and the Moghs have burned entire villages to the ground and killed, raped and tortured the inhabitants, forcing more than 605,000 Rohingyas to seek refuge in neighbouring Bangladesh in what the UN has described as a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

The Rohingya are a stateless community and one of the most persecuted minorities. Myanmar does not recognise Rohingya Muslims as citizens, and forces them to live in squalid camps under apartheid-like conditions.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/south-asia/2017/10/27/lone-survivors-rohingya-camps/




When I read such harrowing stories, my heart goes out to the Rohingya. It makes me realise that had Pakistan not had nuclear weapons and a powerful advanced military than the fate of the Pakistani race would be far worst than the Rohingya.
 
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It makes me realise that had Pakistan not had nuclear weapons and a powerful advanced military than the fate of the Pakistani race would be far worst than the Rohingya.[/QUOTE]

That's the real truth,wish we had also followed your footsteps.
 
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That's the real truth,wish we had also followed your footsteps.



When I see people like the Rohingya and Palestinians suffer, it solidies my belief in Pakistan and it's military. It also strengthens my belief that Pakistan should aim to be a global military power rather than just a regional one. We need to have massive numbers of H-bombs in the very least. So ANY enemy or potential enemy would realise that a war with us would mean the annihilation and obliteration of the nation and race of our adversaries.
 
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12:00 AM, October 31, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:12 AM, October 31, 2017
VIOLENCE AGAINST ROHINGYA WOMEN
Almost everyone is survivor or witness
UN says about those who have fled Rakhine
myanmar_torture_rohingya.jpg

A Rohingya child is in tears after crossing into Bangladesh from Myanmar along with other refugees at Shah Porir Dwip in Teknaf yesterday. Photo: AFP
Diplomatic Correspondent
Almost every Rohingya woman and girl, who fled the Rakhine State in Myanmar and took shelter in Bangladesh, is either a survivor of or a witness to multiple incidences of sexual assault, murder through mutilation or burning alive of a close family member or neighbour, said UN Women.
“Women and girls have experienced sexual and gender‑based violence, perpetrated by both the Myanmar army and by Rakhine locals,” according to the latest report of UN Women.

The October 2017 report titled “Gender brief on Rohingya Refugee Crisis Response in Bangladesh” published yesterday said many women whose sexual assault resulted in conception were reported to have sought out abortions after arriving in Bangladesh.

UN Women prepared the report with testimonies from community leaders and interviews with refugees in makeshift settlements in Balukhali of Cox's Bazar.

It said 51 percent of the displaced people were women and girls and they live in terrible conditions and lack adequate food, water, sanitation, medical care and access to their livelihoods and assets.

The crisis disproportionately affects women, girls and the most vulnerable and marginalised Rohingya refugee population groups by reinforcing, perpetuating and exacerbating pre-existing, persistent gender inequalities, gender-based violence and discrimination, it said.

This is a frightening reminder that sexual and gender‑based violence are among the most horrific weapons of war, instruments of terror most often used against women, the report said.

The recent influx has more than doubled the population living in refugee settlements and stretched the capacities of humanitarian agencies working to provide emergency shelter, access to clean water and sanitation, healthcare services, delivery of food, nutrition support for malnourished girls and boys, education, and protective services.

Increasing overcrowding and decreasing privacy at all refugee sites elevate safety and security risks, particularly for women and girls, it said.

Almost 400,000 refugees need immediate access to water and sanitation. Due to the increased population, women and men are forced to share toilets without basic protection measures including gender segregation, it said.

Twenty‑four thousand pregnant and lactating women require maternal healthcare support at the already overstretched healthcare facilities.

Many Rohingya refugee households are female headed. Households led by females or elderly people with no male relatives are exhibiting greater vulnerability than those with adult males, the report said.

Having fled extreme circumstances, these households are not only traumatised by the loss of their loved ones, but also the loss of their assets, livelihoods and all forms of financial security.

Women and children are also at heightened risk of becoming victims of human trafficking, sexual abuse or child and forced marriage for the same reasons.

The report said women and adolescent girls between the ages of 13 and 20 newly arriving from Myanmar typically have two to four children each.
SANITATION ISSUE
The lack of toilets and well-maintained manual water pumps have complicated the crisis of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, where 30 percent of the 4,370 manual pumps installed were in poor condition and 36 percent of the 24,773 latrines were about to overflow, the United Nations reported Sunday.

"There is continuous new influx of refugees resulting in increase in population at multiple sites which is overloading existing WASH facilities (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) due to heavy use," said the Inter Sector Coordination Group, which coordinates agencies working in the refugee camps.

The number of refugees who have fled the armed conflict in Myanmar to Bangladesh since August 25 has risen to 607,000, as of October 28. The new influx of refugees brought the number of the ethnic group that sought refuge in Bangladesh to about 819,000.
EU COMMISSIONER IN TOWN
Meanwhile, EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Christos Stylianides arrived in Dhaka last night for a two-day visit to the Rohingya refugees camps and see their plights.

Christos Stylianides will leave Dhaka this morning for visiting the Kutupalong camp in Cox's Bazar. He will back to Dhaka tomorrow and hold bilateral meeting with Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali and will depart Bangladesh.
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12:00 AM, November 01, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:51 AM, November 01, 2017
Stop using landmines
Rights group to Myanmar army
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A Rohingya refugee man holds his daughter as it rains, after crossing the Bangladesh-Myanmar border, in Teknaf of Cox's Bazar yesterday. Photo: Reuters
Staff Correspondent
Nine out of the 14 states and regions in Myanmar are contaminated with landmines, making it the world's third most landmine-contaminated country, behind Afghanistan and Colombia.
The telling statistic was revealed by Fortify Rights, a US-based rights group.

A human rights group has asked Myanmar military and ethnic armed groups to immediately cease using antipersonnel landmines that terrorised, maimed and killed civilians in Rakhine and other states of Myanmar.

Fortify Rights, which works in Southeast Asia, also demanded that Myanmar ratifies the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty.

It said that since August, Fortify Rights and others, documented how the Myanmar military laid antipersonnel landmines in northern Rakhine state, resulting in the deaths and maiming of Rohingya civilians fleeing a military-led attack.

Over 607,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since the Myanmar army began its “clearance operations” in response to the coordinated killings of Myanmar security personnel by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army on August 25 this year.

Also, on October 20, two ethnic Ta'ang civilians died from injuries sustained by landmines, Kachin Independence Army (KIA), an ethnic armed-group operating in Kachin State and parts of Shan State, told Fortify Rights. They also added the KIA uses antipersonnel landmines as well.

In September 2016, the rights group said Myanmar's Deputy Minister of Defence, Major General Myint Nwe, admitted its army continued to use landmines in armed conflicts in the country.

Myanmar leaders say they use landmines to safeguard the life and property of people and in self-defence.

In April 2016, the United Nations Secretary General attributed half of the child casualties of war in Myanmar to landmines and other explosive remnants of war.

“Landmines are indiscriminate and dangerous during and after armed conflict,” said Matthew Smith.

“Armed groups should listen to the communities they claim to be protecting and stop using these weapons.”

Myanmar, KIA, and other ethnic armed-groups are bound by customary international humanitarian law to avoid indiscriminate attacks on civilians.

“Displaced communities can't return home until the peace process improves and they can't do it safely until mines are cleared,” Matthew Smith said.
PRESIDENT ASKS UN TO MOUNT PRESSURE ON MYANMAR
Describing the Rohingya influx as a big burden for Bangladesh, President Abdul Hamid yesterday urged the UN and other international agencies to continue mounting pressure on Myanmar to take back its forcefully displaced people from Bangladesh, reports UNB.

"The Rohingya crisis is a big problem for Bangladesh as it's one of the most densely populated countries in the world. Over one million forcefully displaced Rohingyas from Myanmar are now staying here and it's a big burden for us," he told outgoing UN Resident Coordinator to Bangladesh, Robert D Watkins, as he met the President at the Bangabhaban.

The President's Press Secretary Joynal Abedin briefed reporters after the meeting.

President Hamid sought continuous support from them to repatriate the displaced Rohingyas with dignity.

He thanked the UN for helping Bangladesh achieve its Millennium Development Goals' (MDGs) targets and hoped that it will continue supporting the country in attaining the Sustainable Development Goals.
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Rohingya refugee children wait in line to receive permission from the Bangladesh authorities to continue on their way after crossing the border in Teknaf of Cox's Bazar yesterday. Photo: Reuters
Robert D Watkins assured that the UN will continue its support to Bangladesh.

He also hailed the role of Bangladesh over the Rohingya issue, and assured UNDP will provide all-out support, including technical assistance, to the Election Commission of Bangladesh to strengthen its capacity.
FOUR ROHINGYA DIED
Four Rohingya refugees died after a boat carrying a group of Rohingya fleeing violence in Myanmar capsized in the Bay of Bengal early yesterday, reports our correspondent in Cox's Bazar.

The deceased are Enamul Hasan, 4, Minara Begum, 5, Jahura Begum 60 and Sirajul Islam, 19.

The boat capsized at Baillakhali point of Rajapalong union in Ukhia of Cox's Bazar at around 6:00am, said Upazila Nirbahi Officer Md Nikaruzzaman.

Members of police, coast guard, fire service and district administration jointly rescued 33 passengers of the boat. Ten of the injured survivors were sent to local hospitals for treatment, while 23 others to Kutupalong Rohingya settlement.

Survivor Ostambor Ali, 19, said he left his home at Yong Chong village of Buthidaung of Rakhine and reached Garzandia, on the eastern side of Naf River of Myanmar two days back. He boarded the Bangladeshi fishing trawler with around 40 other Rohingyas at 2:00 am Tuesday.

He claimed that just before reaching the shore, the boatman sank the trawler into the river. Another survivor Mujibor Rahman, 18, said the boat capsized due to big waves of the river.

Upazila Nirbahi Officer of Ukhia Nikaruzzaman said they buried four bodies yesterday following the direction of higher authorities.
WATER, SANITATION REMAINS MAJOR CHALLENGE
UN Migration Agency, IOM, said the Rohingya settlements are dangerously congested and overcrowded, while the pressure on sources of clean drinking water and basic sanitation are enormous.

“All of the spontaneous and makeshift sites where the Rohingya have sought shelter are in urgent need of water, sanitation and hygiene support to prevent diseases and to restore basic human dignity,” says Antonio Torres, IOM's expert on water, sanitation and hygiene.

"Existing WASH facilities are not yet sufficient to cope with this number of people.”

Of an estimated 750,000 people initially targeted for WASH assistance, some 530,000 have now been reached. Over the next six months, some 1.166 million people in Cox's Bazar settlements and host communities will need assistance.
EU COMMISSIONER VISITS ROHINGYA CAMP
European Union Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Christos Stylianides, meanwhile, began a two-day visit to Bangladesh, particularly to assess the situation in the Rohingya settlement.

"Here in Bangladesh, the scale of this emergency is painfully clear to see; this is the fastest-growing refugee crisis in the world," he said in a statement after visiting Kutupalong Rohingya settlements.

"The Rohingya people are not alone in these difficult times... European Union continues to insist on full aid access in Myanmar and is working to address the situation in Northern Rakhine," said Stylianides.

It is crucial that every refugee is registered properly and that Myanmar takes all necessary steps to allow them a voluntary and dignified return in secure conditions, said Commissioner Stylianides.

EU and its member countries pledged more than 50 percent of the USD 344 million funding raised at the international Conference in Geneva recently, he said.

Australia, meanwhile, yesterday announced a further 10 million Australian dollars to support the humanitarian needs of the Rohingyas, bringing the total Australian fund for the Rohingyas to 30 million Australian dollars.
US DELEGATION ARRIVES TODAY
Simon Henshaw, acting assistant secretary of US State for the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, is leading a delegation to Bangladesh today to discuss ways to address the humanitarian situation stemming from the Rakhine state crisis.

The delegation visited Myanmar from October 29. During Henshaw's visit to Bangladesh until November 4, he will meet senior government officials, donors, and humanitarian agencies.

The delegation will also visit affected communities in Cox's Bazar to assess the impact of the emergency humanitarian response, identify gaps in assistance, and advise on ways to improve the delivery of humanitarian assistance.
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UN: Rohingya Muslim women in 'terrible' condition
Rohingya refugee crisis 'disproportionately' affects women, girls, says UN Women's Oct. 2017 report
October 31, 2017 Anadolu Agency
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File Photo
Women and girls have experienced sexual and gender-based violence, perpetrated by both the Myanmar army and by Rakhine locals, according to UN Women's latest report.

The Oct. 2017 report titled 'Gender Brief on Rohingya Refugee Crisis Response in Bangladesh' reminded that the violent conflict began in Myanmar's western state of Rakhine in Oct. 2006.

Since Aug. 25, 2017, over 607,000 Rohingya have crossed from Myanmar's western state of Rakhine into Bangladesh, according to the UN.

The refugees are fleeing a fresh military operation in which security forces and Buddhist mobs have killed men, women and children, looted homes and torched Rohingya villages. According to Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Abul Hasan Mahmood Ali, around 3,000 Rohingya have been killed in the crackdown.

"The distressed and traumatized displaced population – approximately 51 per cent of which are women and girls – lives in terrible conditions and lacks adequate food, water, sanitation, medical care and access to their livelihoods and assets," the report said.

It said the situation "disproportionately" affects women, girls and the most "vulnerable and marginalized" Rohingya refugee population groups by reinforcing, perpetuating and exacerbating pre-existing, persistent gender inequalities, gender-based violence and discrimination.

"Many women whose sexual assault resulted in conception are reported to have sought out abortions after arriving in Bangladesh. This is a frightening reminder that sexual and gender-based violence are among the most horrific weapons of war, instruments of terror most often used against women," it added.

The report said about 400,000 refugees need immediate access to water and sanitation. It added 24,000 pregnant and lactating women require maternal health-care support.

Women and children are also at "heightened" risk of becoming victims of human trafficking, sexual abuse or child and forced marriage, it added.

The Rohingya, described by the UN as the world's most persecuted people, have faced heightened fears of attacks since dozens were killed in communal violence in 2012.

Last October, following attacks on border posts in Rakhine's Maungdaw district, security forces launched a five-month crackdown in which, according to Rohingya groups, around 400 people were killed.

The UN documented mass gang rapes, killings -- including of infants and young children -- brutal beatings, and disappearances committed by security personnel. In a report, UN investigators said such violations may have constituted crimes against humanity.
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00:00 dk27 Ekim 2017Yeni Şafak
UNHCR in Bangladesh seeks to give 'sense of security' to Rohingya women, children
Rohingya Muslims continue to stream into Bangladesh, fleeing violence in neighboring Myanmar. Most bring tales of horror and brutality inflicted on them by the members of the Myanmar army. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) which is carrying out relief operations along with its partner organizations and Bangladesh government, said a large number of new refugees required urgent medical attention and a sense of security once they arrive in Bangladesh.
Pregnant Rohingya women forced to give birth in unsanitary conditions
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16 Ekim 2017Yeni Şafak
Young Rohingya women are seen at a makeshift camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh on Oct. 11, 2017.

Hundreds of pregnant Rohingya women are giving birth in harsh conditions at makeshift camps in unhealthy and unsanitary conditions. All they want is for their babies to survive. The Rohingya fled from oppression within ongoing military operations in Myanmar's Rakhine State and took shelter at makeshift camps in Cox's Bazar and Teknaff.

Since Aug. 25, when the military launched a crackdown against the Rohingya, 536,000 Rohingya have crossed from Myanmar's western state of Rakhine into Bangladesh, according to the UN. Thousands of Rohingyas died, and those who survived after a dangerous crossover are faced with the possibility of death, rape or abuse in the midst of dire conditions.
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