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Myanmar probing police 'cover-up' of deaths of Rohingya Muslims

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Myanmar probing police 'cover-up' of deaths of two Rohingya Muslims
>> Reuters

Published: 2017-02-21 21:07:17.0 BdST Updated: 2017-02-21 21:31:57.0 BdST


  • Rohingya.jpg

    Myanmar, also known as Burma, views its Rohingya population as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants. Undated Reuters file photo shows Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence
Myanmar's army-controlled home ministry is investigating a cover-up by the country's border force of the deaths in custody of two Rohingya Muslims in troubled Rakhine State, according to a police report reviewed by Reuters and interviews with two senior security officials.

The internal document is the first official admission of serious wrongdoing by security forces in their crackdown against insurgents in northwestern Myanmar that has sent more than 70,000 people fleeing across the border to Bangladesh.

When contacted by Reuters, the Home Affairs Ministry denied an investigation was under way, but the commander of the Border Guard Police (BGP) in the area where the incident took place and a senior home ministry security official confirmed the authenticity of the document and said it was not the only such case that was being looked into.

The home ministry oversees the national police force, which includes the BGP. The ministry is headed by an army general.

Myanmar is under growing international pressure to take action against those who are alleged to have committed atrocities in Rakhine.

The United Nations has documented mass killings and rapes it says may amount to crimes against humanity.

About 1.1 million Rohingya Muslims live in apartheid-like conditions in northwestern Myanmar, where they are denied citizenship. Many in Buddhist-majority Myanmar regard them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

The civilian government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has repeatedly denied almost all allegations against the country's still-powerful armed forces during what it has said was a lawful counterinsurgency campaign that began in October.

'Not telling the truth'

The undated document reviewed by Reuters, titled "A cover-up of two deaths by Border Guard Police", was compiled by a BGP unit in northern Rakhine and focuses on two men who were arrested on Oct 18 and questioned on suspicion of aiding insurgents.

The men died in custody, the document says, without specifying a cause of death. Instead of reporting the deaths, it says BGP officers in the village of Nga Khu Ya, in Maungdaw township, recorded that they had been transferred, with eight others, to another police detention centre.

Thura San Lwin, BGP chief in Maungdaw township, near the border with Bangladesh, said the document outlining the findings of the investigation had been submitted to police headquarters in the capital, Naypyitaw.

"We are taking actions to punish those who lied in their reports. We won't forgive them. We are also taking actions to punish those who did not follow the rule of law," he said.

Myanmar+border+police.jpg

Border guard police force chief Police Major General Thura San Lwin talks to the media in front of their headquarters in Kyee Kan Pyin village outside Maungdaw Oct 26, 2016. Reuters

He said two other incidents of BGP officers on the ground "not telling the truth" in reports on the security crackdown were also being investigated by the home ministry.

He declined to provide further details about the nature of those other two incidents, or about the probe into the Nga Khu Ya case.

Contradicting the local commander, Home Ministry spokesman Police Colonel Myo Thu Soe denied that any BGP officers had lied to conceal the deaths of the two detainees. He said the pair, who were father and son, died from asthma on the way to a hospital on Oct 18.

Presidential spokesman Zaw Htay said the government "has instructed the police to look into unreliable reports" during their operation in Rakhine. He declined to elaborate.

Blame game

Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Asia division, said cover-ups of abuses by security forces were common in Myanmar.

"There are many other cases of abuse that still need to be exposed," he said, adding that abuses committed by the army were "serious and widespread, and probably dwarf what the BGP committed".

The army has been in direct control of northern Rakhine since early October and drove the sweeping operation there.

The military press bureau did not respond to several requests for comment.

Northwestern Myanmar has been cut off to aid workers and other independent observers since October.

The military campaign there began after nine BGP officers were killed in attacks on security posts near the Bangladesh border on Oct 9. It has renewed international criticism that Myanmar leader Suu Kyi has done too little to help the Rohingya Muslim minority.

Suu+Kyi+Rohingya+Protest.jpg

A protester holds a poster with a defaced image of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi during a demonstration against what protesters say is the crackdown on ethnic Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, in front of the Myanmar embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia Nov 25, 2016. Reuters

In a report published earlier this month based on accounts from Rohingyas who had escaped or been released, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights described "inhumane conditions and ill-treatment" including rape, torture and deprivation of food and water in various detention centres across northern Rakhine.

Myanmar's presidential office, military and police forces have each set up teams to investigate alleged crimes in Rakhine after Suu Kyi promised to probe UN allegations of atrocities.

That has set the scene for a behind-the-scenes tussle over who will be held accountable, according to the senior home ministry official and another source with close ties to senior figures in the military.

The person with close military ties said the army and police were "trying to blame each other" for alleged atrocities.

"The military did not expect such a strong response from the international community," said the source, who is familiar with the thinking of some top generals. "It is now under pressure to investigate."
 
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How did this clash between ethnicities and cultures become so heated in the first place?

My opinion is that the more backward, uneducated and inward-looking a place/population is (Myanmarese), the less their acceptance of minority people (Rohingya) other than their own kind. Having a third-world poverty/infrastructure level worse than Bangladesh does not help either.

"The military did not expect such a strong response from the international community," said the source, who is familiar with the thinking of some top generals. "It is now under pressure to investigate."

This basically sums it up. :disagree:
 
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How did this clash between ethnicities and cultures become so heated in the first place?

Just imagine if a large pack of bangladeshis moved into your country and demanded privileges? Just imagine after giving them that they demanded their own country?
 
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I suppose at this point, Bangladesh taking in more refugees is unfortunately the only possible short term solution with how little real action there has been from the international community.

This is true. However we are hoping that the Myanmarese Junta will bow to int'l pressure and take the Rohingya back. Unless they want to be booted out of ASEAN or desire no Foreign investment, which they desperately need.

Ethnic cleansing in this day and age is really unheard of.
 
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Just imagine if a large pack of bangladeshis moved into your country and demanded privileges? Just imagine after giving them that they demanded their own country?

And then after you refused, had the audacity to start throwing tantrums which they followed up with violence.

This only ends with BD taking them all back. Just like thats how the BD illegals in India will end up.
 
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I suppose at this point, Bangladesh taking in more refugees is unfortunately the only possible short term solution with how little real action there has been from the international community.

Ethnic Chinese also face discrimination in MM, not to the extent of Rohingya though.
 
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And then after you refused, had the audacity to start throwing tantrums which they followed up with violence.

This only ends with BD taking them all back. Just like thats how the BD illegals in India will end up.

Don't worry the diabetes will take care of them. To quote Jurassic Park "nature...uh...nature always finds a way".
 
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Ethnic Chinese also face discrimination in MM, not to the extent of Rohingya though.
Ethnic Chinese are the reason that those jungle dwelling burmese got test of some economic prosperity.But like the snake which bite hand that feed it,burmese hate ethnic Chinese and want to get rid of Chinese entrepreneur, businessmen.They would have done the same Rohingya style oppression to Chinese people,but China is too much of a big power to dare to do it.If you look at their history,it was always the foreigners who propelled the economy of Burma.During British period it was the Bengali and other Indian now it the Chinese people.One of their first act after gaining independence was to expel the Bengali Indian community from Rangoon.Half a million Indian were expelled in 1950s and 1960s. Even now 400,000 Indian live there stateless. They would like to do the same with ethnic Chinese.Primitive burmese don't understand economy or civility,violence is their only strength.
 
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Your post corrected.

its not Bangladeshis but indians do that all the time - a large pack of indians (madeshi indians) moved into Nepal and demanded privileges? And india been using them to set blockade and destabilize Nepal.

But Rohingyas are different. They had been living in Arakan, Burma for thousand years. By executing Rohingya people extreme terror nature of Myanmar exposed out in the open now.
 
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