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Rohingya insurgency declares ‘open war’ in Myanmar

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Rohingya insurgency declares ‘open war’ in Myanmar
Online Desk | Update: 23:07, Aug 28, 2017
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The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army said its 25 August attacks were staged in 'self-defense' and would continue until Rohingya rights are restored, according to a senior militant official.

The official identified himself as Abdullah while giving an exclusive interview with Asia Times on the day after 25 August attacks.

He said the surprise wave of lethal attacks by Rohingya militants on police and army posts in Myanmar’s western Rakhine State, their largest operation to date, was a defensive move aimed at pre-empting an escalating security force crackdown on both the rebels’ military wing and Rohingya civilian communities.

The militant official said the campaign of Myanmar military suppression and the rebel counter-punch has now pushed the majority Muslim northern region of Rakhine state into a state of “open war.”

He vowed “continued resistance” until Rohingya demands for the restoration of citizenship rights within Myanmar are met.

The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) representative who identified himself simply as ‘Abdullah’, insisted that the military crackdown had gathered pace following the reinforcement of security forces by an estimated 400 troops of the crack 33rd Light Infantry Division on August 10-11.

He said it had left the militants no choice other than to strike back in defense of civilian communities facing what he described as further killings and abuses by security forces.

Involving what one Myanmar military count estimated at around 1,000 insurgents, the coordinated wave of attacks marked a dramatic improvement in ARSA’s tactical capabilities when compared with its first attacks on October 9 last year.

On that day, three Border Guard Police posts were stormed leaving nine police dead and triggering a weeks-long ‘area clearance operation’ by the military which international organizations estimate left several hundred, mostly civilian, Rohingya dead, entire villages burned and some 75,000 refugees pushed across the border into Bangladesh.

It’s a security operation the United Nations believes may have involved “crimes against humanity.” The Myanmar government has consistently refused visas for a proposed UN fact-finding team.

This time, synchronized ARSA assaults launched at around 1:00 am on August 25 struck between 25 and 30 police posts across the two northern townships of Maungdaw and Buthidaung. An army base at Taung Bazaar in northern Buthidaung also came under attack by as many as 150 insurgents, according to military sources quoted by Reuters.

In addition to storming posts, militant teams also reportedly blew up bridges and mined roads with improvised explosive devices (IEDs) which were also used as hand grenades.

Against a backdrop of recent reports suggesting that one or more consignments of assault rifles had reached ARSA earlier this year, it remains unclear whether the small-arms used in the latest assaults were more numerous or more modern than the small numbers of firearms used last October. Abdullah denied that any new firearms had reached the group.

According to official figures, the death toll in the clashes has now reached around 100 with at least 80 insurgents killed along with 10 police, one army soldier and an immigration official. Six civilians were also reported to have been killed.

“In the two days before the attacks the military was preparing to strike ARSA bases across the region,” said Abdullah. “We had no choice but to take defensive measures.” He claimed that military raids on villages in Maungdaw and Rathedaung, the third majority-Muslim township in northern Rakhine, saw teenagers and men rounded up and over 25 shot dead. Asia Times could not independently confirm the claim.

Abdullah said one major source of Rohingya alarm that drove the decision by ARSA commanders to launch a counter-offensive was the sealing off of Zay Di Pyin village in Rathedaung by security forces and armed Buddhist civilians from surrounding hamlets.

Beginning in late July, after the killing of a local Buddhist which was blamed on Muslims, the Rohingya section of the mixed village of some 700 people was surrounded and restrictions imposed on the movement of Muslim villagers seeking to work outside the village as well as on food supplies going in. Parts of the village were later reportedly burned down.

The interview with Asia Times was given on condition that in the interests of militant security its location not be disclosed. However, Abdullah noted that he had been directly authorized by ARSA “commander-in-chief” or “emir” Ataullah abu Ammar Jununi to set out the militants’ current position and objectives. Asia Times was able to confirm through reliable independent sources that the ARSA representative and the rebel commander are indeed in daily contact.

An urbane, middle-aged man with a polished command of English, who Asia Times understands has been associated with the Rohingya cause for many years, Abdullah was accompanied to the interview by two younger Rohingya associates in their late twenties.

In discussing the backdrop to the rebel offensive of August 25, Abdullah asserted that the widening military crackdown and the blockade of Zay Di Pyin had been deliberately timed to provoke clashes and undermine the findings of the commission on the Rakhine crisis headed by former United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan.

“Knowing that Kofi Annan was doing good work, the military had a clear plan to jeopardize it and derail the report,” he said.

Nevertheless, the specific timing of a complex and obviously carefully planned rebel offensive within hours of the August 24 release of the commission’s final report clearly suggests that ARSA also either sought to exploit the release of the report with a dramatic show of strength at a time when international attention was focused on the Rohingya crisis; or, at very least, did not see the report and its likely findings as grounds for restraint in the face of mounting military attacks.

The Commission’s report urged the Myanmar government to loosen restrictions on citizenship and movement of the stateless Rohingya community in Rakhine which are written into the controversial 1982 Citizenship Act. The report criticized the restrictions as not in accordance with international conventions to which Myanmar is a signatory, while warning of the dangers of further violence in the region.

Turning to the future of the conflict, Abdullah conceded that the stark disparity in military capabilities between still poorly armed rebels and the Myanmar army, or Tatmadaw, in a relatively small geographical region made any prospect of protracted military resistance problematic. A political solution based on the restoration of Rohingya citizenship and basic civil rights within Myanmar was ultimately the only solution, he said.

“In the short term our army is sending a message to the world that the injustice we have been subjected to is deep-rooted,” he said. “We need justice and we are hopeful that the international community will be there with political pressure. We are now at the final stage before full-fledged genocide, so we have to defend our civilian population.”

“We are not though looking to develop a long-term guerrilla struggle. In the longer term, our military and political wings will work together to push for dialogue. Even if political reconciliation does not seem viable at the moment, we should not lose spirit and stop our struggle. Our message to Arakan-born Rakhines is that we can live together. Arakan must be enjoyed by Rohingya and Rakhines together.”

Throughout the interview, Abdullah touched repeatedly on the historical record that details a Muslim presence in the Arakan going back hundreds of years and the role of Muslims in the court, army and civil bureaucracy of the Arakanese kingdom of Mrauk U, which was overrun by Burman armies in 1784. “Mrauk U was built by Rakhines and Muslims together,” he said.

Abdullah conceded, however, that while the presence of an elected civilian government in Myanmar served positively to balance off hard-line military policies, the position of State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi was not in the short term likely to facilitate political dialogue.

“She does not have good, direct channels of information,” he said. “She’s trapped between the army and Rakhine members of the (governing) NLD (National League for Democracy) who are feeding her distorted information. She does though have a moral duty at least to go and see for herself.”

For her part, Suu Kyi called the rebel offensive “a calculated attempt to undermine the efforts of those seeking to build peace and harmony in Rakhine state.” On August 27, the government proscribed ARSA as a “terrorist organization”, while the Office of the State Counsellor warned the media against “writing in support of the group.”
http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/157857/Rohingya-insurgency-declares-‘open-war’-in-Myanmar
 
Rohingyas along border left without food, water
Mohiuddin Alamgir with Mohammad Nurul Islam in Cox’s Bazar | Published: 00:03, Aug 29,2017 | Updated: 01:44, Aug 29,2017
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A Rohingya woman looks on after being restricted by the members of Border Guards Bangladesh to enter into Bangladesh side, in Cox’s Bazar on Monday. — Reuters photo

Thousands of Rohingyas fleeing violence in their homeland Rakhine State of Myanmar remained trapped along the border without shelter, safe drinking water, food and medical care after they failed to enter Bangladesh amid heightened patrols.

Amid untold sufferings of the persecuted ethnic minority Rohingyas, international agencies on Monday reported that Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi and the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army continued accusing each other for the violence.

Bangladesh on Monday proposed joint operations by security forces along borders for containing alleged militant activities in Myanmar’s Rakhine State.

Twelve more Rohingyas were admitted to Chittagong Medical College Hospital taking to 20 the number of Rohingyas admitting to the hospital with bullet and burn injuries reportedly sustained in Myanmar violence.

Border Guard Bangladesh
thwarted attempts of intrusion by 546 Rohingyas on Monday.
Border guard battalion-2 commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel SM Ariful Islam said that they sent back at least 475 Rohingyas when they were trying to enter the country through different border points.

Border guard battalion-34 commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Manjurual Hassan Khan said that they sent back 71 Rohingyas to Myanmar through Balokhali border point.
Border guards and Bangladesh Coast Guard also sent back 331 Rohingyas on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Border guard director general Major General Abul Hossain said in Dhaka on Monday that they were on alert in defensive position. ‘But, we do not want to detail it. If someone is getting closure, we must retaliate…None will be allowed to cross zero-line.’

He said that they were showing humanitarian attitude to Rohingyas but many were also been sent back.

More than 100 people died since August 25 as scores of men purportedly from the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army ambushed Myanmar police posts with knives, guns and homemade explosives, killing at least a dozen security force members.

Rohingya refugee leaders in Bangladesh who have contact with the fleeing Rohingyas in Myanmar said that civilians, including women, children and elderly people, from Rakhine State assembled in no man’s lands along the border were facing untold sufferings in absence of food, shelter, safe drinking water and Medicare.

A Kutupalang Registered Rohingya camp leader said that these people were living under open sky or making shelter with plastic sheets to save themselves from scorching heat or monsoon rain.
‘People have already finished dry food they carried and there is no Medicare and safe water. Many fell sick as they had to walk a lot,’ he said.

‘Local people are helping them with some food which is in no way near the enough,’ Gumdum union parishad chairman AKM Jahangir Kabir said, adding that 4,000-5,000 Rohingyas gathered along the Gumdum border adjacent areas.

Local people at Jalpaitali near Gumdum said that border guards tried to push back several thousand Rohingyas living there for the past two-three days under the open sky but the Rohingyas returned to the place within an hour as gun shots rang out on the Myanmar sides.

Border guard battalion-50 second in command Major Manjurul Islam said that Rohingyas returned to zero line as firing broke out on the other side of border.

Rohingya leaders from registered and unregistered camps and former Naikhyangchari upazila chairman Mohammad Ikbal said that about 2,500-3,000 Rohingyas sneaked into Bangladesh dodging border forces taking to 6,500-7,000 the number of Rohingyas entered Bangladesh in the past four days.
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs at its weekly humanitarian snapshot released on Monday said that as of Sunday an estimated 5,200 people were reported to have crossed the border into Cox’s Bazar since August 24.

News agency Agence France-Presse reported from Yangon that Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday accused Rohingya fighters of burning down homes and using child soldiers during a recent surge in violence in troubled Rakhine state, allegations denied by the extremists.
Both sides accused each other of committing fresh atrocities in recent days, accusations difficult to verify because the fighting was taking place in inaccessible villages.

The government department directly run by Suu Kyi, the State Counsellor’s Office, released a flurry of statements on Facebook, including grim pictures of civilians allegedly shot dead by militants.
‘Terrorists have been fighting security forces by using children at the frontline (and) setting fire (to) minority-ethnic villages,’ the office said it its latest statement on Monday.

The statement said that there should be ‘no concerns for civilians who are not linked with extremist terrorists.’ It called on Rohingyas to cooperate with security forces and not brandish ‘sticks, swords and weapons’ when security forces approached.

The extremist group behind the fighting––Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army––hit back with its own allegations on Monday. ‘While raiding Rohingya villages, the Burmese brutal military soldiers bring along with them groups of Rakhine (Buddhist) extremists to attack Rohingya villagers, loot Rohingyas’ properties and later burn down Rohingya houses,’ the group said via its Twitter account @ARSA_Official.

Bangkok based Asia Times on Monday reported that in an exclusive interview with Asia Times, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army said its August 25 attacks were staged in ‘self-defense’ and would continue until Rohingya rights was restored.

The surprise wave of attacks by the group on police and army posts in Rakhine State, their largest operation to date, was a defensive move aimed at pre-empting an escalating security force crackdown on both the rebels’ military wing and Rohingya civilian communities, a senior official of the group told Asia Times.

Speaking in an exclusive interview on August 26, the official said the campaign of Myanmar military suppression and the rebel counter-punch now pushed the majority Muslim northern region of Rakhine state into a state of ‘open war.’ He vowed ‘continued resistance’ until demand for the restoration of citizenship rights of Rohingyas within Myanmar was met.

Reuters reported that Myanmar security forces intensified operations against Rohingya insurgents on Monday, police and other sources said, following three days of clashes with militants in the worst violence involving Myanmar’s Muslim minority in five years.
The violence marked a dramatic escalation of a conflict simmered since October 2016, when a similar but much smaller series of attacks on security posts prompted a brutal military response dogged by allegations of rights abuses.

‘Now the situation is not good. Everything depends on them––if they’re active, the situation will be tense,’ said police officer Tun Hlaing from Buthidaung township, referring to the Rohingya insurgents.
‘We split into two groups, one will provide security at police outposts and the other group is going out for clearance operation with the military,’ he said.

The Asian Legal Resource Centre and Bangladeshi human rights organisation Odhikar in a joint statement on Monday wished to bring the situation of the Rohingyas to the notice of the United Nations Human Rights Council. ALRC and Odhikar sought immediate, effective action from the international human rights community to protect the victim Rohingyas from ethnic cleansing by the military and security forces of Myanmar.

Bangladesh Nationalist Party chairperson Khaleda Zia on Monday urged the government and law enforcement agencies to provide shelter to Rohingyas fleeing violence in Myanmar.
The BNP chairperson said the situation turned ‘worst’ due to ‘inattentive’ Bangladesh government’s ‘weak diplomatic efforts’ over the Rohingya crisis.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/23001/rohingyas-along-border-left-without-food-water
 
Rohingya crisis: What we know
AFP . Yangon | Update: 22:33, Aug 28, 2017
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Rohingya Muslims are once more fleeing in droves towards Bangladesh, trying to escape the latest surge in violence in Rakhine state between a shadowy militant group and Myanmar’s military.

It is the newest chapter in the grim recent history of the Rohingya, a people of about one million reviled in Myanmar as illegal immigrants and denied citizenship.
This is a fact box on them:
Who are they? -
The Rohingya are the world’s largest stateless community and of one of its most persecuted minorities.


Using a dialect similar to that spoken in Chittagong in southeast Bangladesh, the Sunni Muslims are loathed by many in majority-Buddhist Myanmar who see them as illegal immigrants and call them “Bengali”-even though many have lived in Myanmar for generations.

They are not officially recognised as an ethnic group, partly due to a 1982 law stipulating that minorities must prove they lived in Myanmar prior to 1823 -- before the first Anglo-Burmese war-to obtain nationality.

Most live in the impoverished western state of Rakhine but are denied citizenship and harassed by restrictions on movement and work.

Another 400,000 live in Bangladeshi camps, although Dhaka only recognises a small portion as refugees.

Sectarian violence between the Rohingya and local Buddhist communities broke out in 2012, leaving more than 100 dead and the state segregated along religious lines.

More than 120,000 Rohingya fled over the following five years to Bangladesh and Southeast Asia, often braving perilous sea journeys controlled by brutal trafficking gangs.

Then last October things got much worse.

What happened in October? -
Despite decades of persecution, the Rohingya largely eschewed violence.

But in October a small and previously unknown militant group-the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) -- staged a series of well coordinated and deadly attacks on security forces.

Myanmar’s military responded with a massive security crackdown. Some 87,000 new refugees flooded into Bangladesh bringing with them harrowing stories of murder, rape and burned villages.

The UN believes the army’s response many amount to ethnic cleansing, allegations denied by the government of Aung San Suu Kyi and the army.

In recent months the day-to-day fighting died down, but civilians described being trapped between army “clearance operations” and an assassination campaign by the militants, who are murdering anyone suspected of collaboration.

Then last Friday the militants launched a new series of coordinated attacks, killing a dozen security personnel and sparking the latest refugee exodus as the military fought back.

More than 100 have died in the latest round of fighting.

What do we know about the militants? -

They initially called themselves Harakah al-Yaqin (the Faith Movement) and its leader Ata Ulla adopted the rhetoric of other global jihadist movements.

The International Crisis Group says Ata Ullah was born to Rohingya parents in the Pakistani city of Karachi and grew up in Mecca. The group formed after the 2012 communal riots and gathered supporters before its 2016 attacks.

Myanmar authorities have previously said they have links to militants trained by the Pakistani Taliban. They declared them a terrorist organisation over the weekend.

In more recent months the group has become less publicly Islamic, changing its name to the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army.

Members are not well armed. The October ambushes were largely done with swords, sticks and a few firearms, some of them homemade-though they did make off with stolen guns and ammunition.

Photographs of seized items again last weekend showed rudimentary weapons, largely swords, clubs and homemade explosives.

But statements also say the ambushes are being carried out by groups 300-500 strong, suggesting ARSA ranks have grown in recent months.

What’s Suu Kyi doing about it? -

De facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi has faced widespread criticism for her stance on the Rohingya.

Her administration has dismissed concerns about rights abuses and refused to grant visas to UN officials tasked with investigating such allegations.

Analysts say Suu Kyi is hampered by the politically incendiary nature of the issue in Myanmar and the fact she has little control over the military.

On Thursday a panel led by former UN chief Kofi Annan which she commissioned released a report on how peace can be brought back to Rakhine.

Among its recommendations was an end to the state-sanctioned persecution of the Rohingya and a path to citizenship for them.

Within hours of the report’s release, renewed fighting broke out.
http://en.prothom-alo.com/international/news/157847/Rohingya-crisis-What-we-know

‘We have lost everything’: A resistance born out of persecution
Tribune Desk
Published at 02:46 AM August 29, 2017
Last updated at 03:43 AM August 29, 2017
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Photo:Reuters
The sound of gunfire floats across the Naf river as desperate men, women and children with bullet wounds and other injuries seek refuge and treatment in Bangladesh

As the violence in Myanmar’s troubled Rakhine state escalates, Rohingya families stream across the border into Bangladesh, bringing with them stories of killings, rape and torture at the hands of Myanmar soldiers.

The sound of gunfire floats across the Naf river as desperate men, women and children with bullet wounds and other injuries seek refuge and treatment in Bangladesh. What was a tale of persecution and systematic marginalisation is rapidly turning into a full-scale guerrilla war in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

Although Aung San Suu Kyi’s government has denied reports of atrocities committed by the army, and accused the Rohingya of setting fire to villages and using child soldiers, independent observers, aid workers and UN officials have condemned what they say is a disproportionate response to Rohingya attacks on police outposts.

Also Read- Sounds of gunfire from across the border

The attacks by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, an armed group which says it is fighting to regain basic rights for the Rohingya, began last year and marked a significant escalation of the long-simmering conflict between the Rohingya minority and the Myanmar government.

Ataullah, the leader of ARSA, told a Dhaka Tribune correspondent that his group only attacked military targets. Although the group receives support from Rohingyas living abroad, its leaders insist that it is a home-grown movement.

Conflict experts warn that Myanmar’s campaign to clear Rakhine of rebels could lead to hundreds of thousands of refugees crossing the broad Naf river into Bangladesh, as they did in the 1970s and 1990s when military operations triggered a refugee crisis.

The Burmese army’s crackdown risks increasing support for the newly-formed Arakan Salvation Army, formerly known as Harakah-al-Yaqin, which already has backers among the Rohingya diaspora in Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and elsewhere.

The problem on the border could also hurt regional stability. Bangladesh, which is battling the rise of militant groups linked to al Qaeda and the Islamic State on its territory, has long expressed worry that international terrorist organizations could seek to exploit the Rohingyas’ anger.

“It could create conditions for further radicalizing sections of the Rohingya population that transnational jihadists could exploit to pursue their own agendas in the country,” the Brussels-based International Crisis Group said in a report last year.

Also Read- Myanmar army conducts clearance operations in Rakhine

For years the Rohingya have been repressed, a Muslim minority in a mostly Buddhist nation where their sole political goal is to be allowed to exist. They are denied citizenship and the right to travel freely. Over 100 were killed in sectarian clashes in 2012. Recent articles in state media have described the crisis in Rakhine as being caused by “human fleas.”

The latest violence, though, is qualitatively different from earlier outbreaks as some Rohingyas seem to be getting organized to fight back.

In retaliation, human rights groups say, the army is targeting civilian populations in what amounts to collective punishment. Satellite images last year showed widespread destruction in Rohingya villages and U.N. officials spoke out about “daily reports of rape and killings of Rohingya”.

Although ARSA doesn’t appear to have a transnational jihadist agenda, according to International Crisis Group’s report published last year, a brutal counterinsurgency could radicalize some of the million-strong Rohingya, most of who live in congested, decrepit camps for internally displaced people.
Matthew Smith, Executive Director of Fortify Rights, a human rights group that has worked in Rakhine for many years, says the fledgling militant outfit was “born out of persecution.”

This was echoed by Rohingyas who have fled Rakhine in recent days. “We have lost everything,” one man said. “We want to fight back. We are all ARSA.”
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/08/29/lost-everything-resistance-born-persecution/
 
http://www.thedailystar.net/world/s...ares-open-war-myanmar-security-forces-1455403
Home World Southeast Asia
09:15 PM, August 28, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 09:32 PM, August 28, 2017
Rohingya insurgency declares ‘open war’ in Myanmar

No choice but to strike back for self-defense, ARSA spokesperson says in exclusive interview with Asia Times
arsa.jpg

Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army chief Ataullah Abu Ammar Jununi during a video message. Photo taken from Prothom Alo
Star Online Report

The sudden attacks by Rohingya insurgents on police and army posts in Myanmar’s Rakhine State was a defensive move aimed at pre-empting an escalating security force crackdown on both the rebels’ military wing and Rohingya civilian communities, spokesperson of the rebel group said.

In an exclusive interview with Asia Times, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army representative who identified himself simply as ‘Abdullah’ said its August 25 attacks were staged in 'self-defense' and would continue until Rohingya rights are restored.

READ MORE: Violence in Rakhine State: Deadly attacks in Myanmar kill 89

He insisted that the military crackdown had gathered pace following the reinforcement of security forces by an estimated 400 troops of the crack 33rd Light Infantry Division on August 10-11, the newspaper reports.


It had left them no choice other than to strike back in defense of civilian communities facing what he described as further killings and abuses by security forces.

Speaking in the exclusive interview on the day after the attacks of August 25, Abdullah said the campaign of Myanmar military suppression and the rebel counter-punch has now pushed the majority Muslim northern region of Rakhine state into a state of “open war.”

He also vowed “continued resistance” until Rohingyas’ demands for the restoration of citizenship rights within Myanmar are met.

“In the two days before the attacks the military was preparing to strike ARSA bases across the region,” said Abdullah. “We had no choice but to take defensive measures.”

Abdullah said one major source of Rohingya alarm that drove the decision by ARSA commanders to launch a counter-offensive was the sealing off of Zay Di Pyin village in Rathedaung by security forces and armed Buddhist civilians from surrounding hamlets, the Hong Kong based newspaper reports.

The ARSA spokesperson gave the interview to Asia Times on condition that in the interests of their security its location not be disclosed. However, Abdullah noted that he had been directly authorised by ARSA “commander-in-chief” or “emir” Ataullah Abu Ammar Jununi to set out the militants’ current position and objectives.

The news agency was able to confirm through reliable independent sources that the ARSA representative and the rebel commander are indeed in daily contact.

An urban, middle-aged man with a polished command of English, Abdullah was accompanied to the interview by two younger Rohingya associates in their late twenties.

Discussing the backdrop to the rebel offensive of August 25, he asserted that the widening military crackdown and the blockade of Zay Di Pyin had been deliberately timed to provoke clashes and undermine the findings of the commission on the Rakhine crisis headed by former United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan, Asia Times reports.

“Knowing that Kofi Annan was doing good work, the military had a clear plan to jeopardise it and derail the report,” he said.

Regarding the future of the conflict, Abdullah said, “A political solution based on the restoration of Rohingya citizenship and basic civil rights within Myanmar was ultimately the only solution.”

“In the short term our army is sending a message to the world that the injustice we have been subjected to is deep-rooted,” he said.

“We need justice and we are hopeful that the international community will be there with political pressure. We are now at the final stage before full-fledged genocide, so we have to defend our civilian population.”

“We are not though looking to develop a long-term guerrilla struggle. In the longer term, our military and political wings will work together to push for dialogue. Even if political reconciliation does not seem viable at the moment, we should not lose spirit and stop our struggle. Our message to Arakan-born Rakhines is that we can live together. Arakan must be enjoyed by Rohingya and Rakhines together.”

Abdullah alleged that while the presence of an elected civilian government in Myanmar served positively to balance off hard-line military policies, the position of State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi was not in the short term likely to facilitate political dialogue.

“She does not have good, direct channels of information,” he said. “She’s trapped between the army and Rakhine members of the (governing) NLD (National League for Democracy) who are feeding her distorted information. She does though have a moral duty at least to go and see for herself.”
 
‘No respite’: Myanmar troops force Rohingyas into Bangladesh
Adil Sakhawat from Naikhongchhari border
Published at 03:14 AM August 29, 2017
Last updated at 03:37 AM August 29, 2017
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Photo:REUTERS
'What I observed from this vantage point came as a complete surprise'
I was at a strategic point from where the Bangladesh-Myanmar border fence and a border post of Myanmar Border Guard Forces (BGF) on the other side was visible.

What I observed from this vantage point came as a complete surprise.

Around 11am, while I was talking to the newly arrived Rohingyas at a temporary shelter at the international border, they were suddenly instructed to voluntarily dismantle their shelters and move near the border fence.

They were not forced to go into Myanmar territory from where they fled but they were told to take shelter near the border fence as the situation seemed to have calmed down, said a Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) official.

As instructed, the Rohingyas moved to a position beside the fence. But there was to be no respite for them.

At around 1pm, two bursts of gunfire were heard and smoke began to curl up from the horizon. Locals and Rohingya refugees told me it was the village Debuinna in Maungdaw township that was burning.

Within 10 minutes, a group of at least 100 Rohingyas appeared on the other side of the fence, running down the hillside.

From the other side of the hill where the BGF border post was situated, several Myanmar border guards came down at the same time.

Their border post was on the hill numbered 12-15.
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Rohingya people sits on the Bangladesh side as they are restricted by the members of Border Guards Bangladesh (BGB), to go further inside Bangladesh, in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh August 28, 2017 REUTERS

But to my surprise, they did not advance towards the fleeing Rohingyas. Instead, they moved to the fence, cut a human-sized hole in the wire fence and withdrew to their post once again.

In the next two hours, Rohingyas who were fleeing Myanmar exited the country through those holes.

BGF members stood not far from the fence, eyeing the fleeing Rohingyas. But they did not react or open fire, only standing there until the Rohingyas were well inside Bangladesh territory.

I found out that along this area, there were four to five holes like this in the border fence.

The Rohingyas who had been moved closer to the fence in the morning again moved back near Bangladeshi territory.

Throughout the day I heard several other gunshots and explosions, believed to be 4-5km from the border fence. A helicopter was seen flying in the sky and landed next to the BGF border post.

I saw the Rohingyas who had taken shelter near the border staring back at their country, where for decades their own government has branded them illegal Bangladeshis and taken away their basic rights.
Also Read: ‘They torched our houses and shot at us as we fled’
Asked about the current situation at the border, BGB 34 Battalion Commanding Official Monzurul Hasan Khan told me: “We do not know what is happening on the other side, but the Rohingyas are now taking shelter at the zero line. We hope that they will go back to their country.”

Asked whether he was expecting more Rohingyas to come into Bangladesh, he replied: “Maybe, maybe not. We have to wait. It depends on the situation.”

I asked International Organisation for Migration Cox’s Bazar chief Sanjukta Sahany about estimates of newly arrived Rohingyas and plans to provide humanitarian assistance to them. She replied that it was too early to comment as the situation had begun only three days ago.

“We are carrying out our regular activities. We have not started anything yet. We thought to observe the situation as we experienced this the last time as well. After observing for two or three days we will plan something for these people,” she said.

UNHCR Bangladesh Spokesperson Joseph Tripura said that by their estimate, up to August 27 at least 3,000 Rohingyas had entered the camps in Bangladesh.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/banglad...te-myanmar-troops-force-rohingyas-bangladesh/

Birth of an ethnic insurgency in Myanmar
The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army says its lethal rebellion is strictly homegrown of local grievances and not abetted by transnational terror groups. "We are not jihadists," a spokesman tells Asia Times
The shadowy militant faction whose offensive late last week threatens to plunge Myanmar’s western Rakhine state into wider conflict, with real potential for large-scale communal violence, is committed to securing citizenship and basic civil rights within Myanmar for the state’s Rohingya Muslim population, a spokesman for its commander stressed to Asia Times in an exclusive interview.

He went on to pointedly reject suggestions that simply because it is Muslim the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) has links with, or could be co-opted by, transnational jihadist terror groups.

“Out status as a recognized ethnic group within Myanmar must be restored,” said Abdullah, an authorized representative of Ataullah abu Ammar Junjuni, who heads ARSA. “As long as our demands are not met, resistance will continue and, if unfulfilled, those demands will be upgraded to another level.”

While declining to elaborate on what “another level” might involve, Abdullah stressed repeatedly that the ARSA’s fight is an ethno-nationalist one. “We are not jihadists. This is clear from ARSA’s modus operandi, the way it operates and is run, and the direction it’s moving in. None of this is in line with the goals of Pakistani or other jihadist groups. We are actually much more like any other (ethnic) armed group in Myanmar.”

In an extended interview with Asia Times one day after a wave of ARSA attacks on police posts and an army base across Rakhine state’s northern townships had left nearly 100 dead, Abdullah cautioned the international community against “any perceptions of us as terrorists” or “falling into the trap of the Myanmar government.”

Myanmar officials routinely refer to ARSA insurgents as “Bengali terrorists” and on August 27 the government formally outlawed the group as a “terrorist organization.” The term “Bengali” implies the state’s marginalized Rohingya community of at least 1.1 million are illegal interlopers from Bangladesh rather than Myanmar citizens entitled to civil rights.

Abdullah ridiculed the proposition of illegal Bangladeshi migration into Rakhine, which the military and successive Myanmar governments have used to justify a policy of denying the Rohingya community citizenship and restricting basic rights of travel and education.

“For one thing there is a heavy security force presence including police and military all along the border, so how is it these numbers of people somehow manage to cross in? For another, why would anyone seek to migrate to what is in effect an open prison?”

“Life in Arakan (Rakhine) in many areas is like something out of the Iron Age. In many place there is no electricity from the government yet. Why would anyone risk his life trying to sneak into such a place?”

Since the 1980s, hundreds of thousands of Rohingya have in fact fled Myanmar to settle in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Malaysia, and the Middle East.

The controversial counter-insurgency campaign launched by the armed forces, or Tatmadaw, in October and November last year following ARSA attacks on three police posts pushed a further 75,000 – 80,000 civilians into Bangladesh, according to aid agencies. Since the latest upsurge of violence began on August 25, a further 4,000 have fled across the border, reports said.

Abdullah noted that ARSA began operating in Rakhine State in 2013 in response to anger and despair, particularly among Rohingya youth, following communal unrest in 2012. The rioting left scores dead and over 130,000 Rohingya confined to squalid camps for the internally displaced around the Rakhine state capital of Sittwe, where they have languished ever since.

Against this backdrop, ARSA has developed as an essentially home-grown movement rather than an offshoot of earlier militant groups based in Bangladesh, most notably the Rohingya Solidarity Organization (RSO), which today is basically defunct.
“ARSA was a direct consequence of events in 2012 and reflects the emergence of a new generation – young people with access to social media who have experience of the world,” he said.

Part of that experience has clearly involved interaction with the wider Rohingya diaspora, from where its commander Ataullah Junjuni hails. Born and raised in Karachi, Pakistan, to a family of Rohingya refugees, Ataullah later moved to Saudi Arabia, where among a Rohingya diaspora community of around 150,000 he served as an imam, or prayer leader, in a mosque.

Currently in his early 40s, he returned to Rakhine in 2013 after being in contact with young people from the state and rose to lead what was first a movement called Harakah al Yaqin (or Faith Movement) and later a clandestine military force, said Abdullah.

Whether Ataullah’s background in Pakistan had any bearing on the emergence of ARSA as a clearly well-organized and tactically competent guerrilla force remains unclear. According to Abdullah, military instructors who have been conducting training for militant recruits in remote camps in Rakhine since at least since 2014 are Rohingya who earlier served in the Myanmar police and military. Ataullah himself was trained in Rakhine by this cadre, added the ARSA spokesman.

Independent analysts who spoke to Asia Times view this version of events as improbable given the blanket discrimination faced by Rohingya in Myanmar, particularly in terms of service with the security forces. Rather more likely, in their assessment, albeit speculative, is that sympathetic ex-servicemen from other countries in the region have been recruited or volunteered their services as instructors.

Both official Myanmar and ARSA accounts concur, however, that military instruction has taken place at camps in jungle or mountain locations across the three northern townships of Maungdaw, Buthidaung and Rathedaung and particularly in the Mayu range, a line of hills which stretches south from the Bangladesh border between the flatlands of Maungdaw in the east and of Buthidaung to the west.

According to Abdullah, following the induction of new recruits who are required to swear an oath on the Koran pledging allegiance to the Rohingya cause, instruction is conducted at two levels. Basic training using wooden rifles lasts just one or two weeks and is intended essentially to instill discipline and basic guerrilla field-craft. A second module of advanced training lasts two to three months.

Abdullah provided no details on the content of the advanced training, but it is likely to include at very least familiarization with handguns, automatic rifles and machine guns and, importantly, skills in assembling improvised explosive devices (IEDS) of various types using different triggering methods.

It remains to be seen whether, as the conflict escalates and the Myanmar military focus operations in the Mayu Hills, ARSA is able to sustain the level of training it appears to have maintained since 2014.

Abdullah denied that ARSA had benefitted from consignments of weapons from across Myanmar’s border. However, as earlier reported in Asia Times, images of youths in sarongs and tee-shirts training with apparently new Kalashnikov assault rifles have been circulating in intelligence circles.

It also appears highly unlikely that the coordinated attacks of August 25 could have been launched on at least 25 security force positions without a far larger number of automatic weapons than was looted from three Border Guard Police posts attacked on October 9, 2016.

According to official figures released in the aftermath of the attacks, approximately 60-70 firearms were lost by the police in those attacks, some of which have been retrieved in subsequent raids and clashes.
http://www.atimes.com/article/birth-ethnic-insurgency-myanmar/
 
Had the eastern wing not back stabbed us, we would have turned the Monkland into Yugoslavia in a few years time.
Its their fight.. Let them fight it out. Independence is not something a free meal. They have to shed their own blood for it.
 
Exclusive: Insurgents call Rohingyas to arms for war in Myanmar (Audio)
The declaration comes in the wake of the rapidly escalating conflict in the Rakhine state
The armed insurgents in the Rakhine state, calling themselves the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (Arsa), have called upon the Rohingya population to take up arms against the Myanmar army.

In an audio recording exclusively obtained by the Dhaka Tribune, Ata Ullah Abu Umar Al Junooni, leader of the insurgent group, called for open war in Myanmar.

Also Read- Exclusive: Is this the final confrontation for the Rohingya?
He asked the oppressed Rohingya people to join his insurgency to take the fight to the armed forces of Myanmar.
Also Read- ‘We will fight until the last drop of blood’
Ata Ullah asked the people to sacrifice their lives in accordance with the Quran in their struggle.

“If 300 people come from each village, 50 may die in the conflict, but the surviving 250 will win the fight for them.”

The declaration comes in the wake of the rapidly escalating conflict in the Rakhine state. Thousands have fled to Bangladesh and hundreds are reported dead, including insurgents, Rohingya civilians, and the Myanmar law enforcement agency members.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/south-asia/2017/08/29/insurgents-rohingyas-war-myanmar/
 
The Mystery behind Rohingya Armed Muslim Groups
সশস্ত্র রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিম গোষ্ঠী 'আরসা'র নেপথ্যে কারা?
মোয়াজ্জেম হোসেনবিবিসি বাংলা, লন্ডন
২৬ অগাস্ট ২০১৭

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ছবির কপিরাইট YOUTUBE
Image caption ইউটিউবে অনেক ভিডিও ছেড়েছে এই সশস্ত্র রোহিঙ্গা গোষ্ঠী

শুক্রবার যে সশস্ত্র হামলার পর মিয়ানমারের রাখাইন প্রদেশ আবার অশান্ত হয়ে উঠেছে তার জন্য মিয়ানমারের সরকার দোষারোপ করছে 'আরাকান রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মি' নামে একটি সংগঠনকে।
এর আগে গত বছরের অক্টোবরেও রাখাইনে পুলিশ ফাঁড়ির ওপর হামলার ঘটনার জন্য দায়ী করা হচ্ছিল এই সশস্ত্র গোষ্ঠীটিকে।

রোহিঙ্গাদের মধ্যে এরকম সশস্ত্র গোষ্ঠীর তৎপরতা আগেও শোনা গেছে, কিন্তু এই সংগঠনটির নাম এর আগে কেউ শোনেননি।
মিয়ানমারের সরকারের দিক থেকে রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমরা ধারাবাহিকভাবে যে বৈষম্য-অত্যাচার-নিপীড়নের শিকার হচ্ছেন, এর ফলে তাদের অনেকে কি এখন সশস্ত্র জঙ্গী মতাদর্শের দিকে ঝুঁকে পড়ছে?
পেছনে কারা?

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ছবির কপিরাইট YOUTUBE
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সৌদি প্রবাসী রোহিঙ্গাদের উদ্যোগেই গঠিত হয় রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মি
আরাকান রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মি আগে ইংরেজীতে 'ফেইথ মুভমেন্ট' নামে তাদের তৎপরতা চালাতো। স্থানীয়ভাবে এটি পরিচিত ছিল 'হারাকাহ আল ইয়াকিন' নামে।

মিয়ানমারের সরকার ইতোমধ্যে রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মিকে একটি সন্ত্রাসবাদী গোষ্ঠী বলে ঘোষণা করেছে।
মিয়ানমার বলছে, এই গ্রুপটির নেতৃত্বে রয়েছে রোহিঙ্গা জিহাদীরা, যারা বিদেশে প্রশিক্ষণ পেয়েছে। তবে সংগঠনটি কত বড়, এদের নেটওয়ার্ক কতটা বিস্তৃত, তার কোন পরিস্কার ধারণা তাদের কাছেও নেই।

মিয়ানমারের কর্মকর্তাদের ধারণা, এই গোষ্ঠীর নেতৃত্বে রয়েছে 'আতাউল্লাহ' নামে একজন রোহিঙ্গা। তার জন্ম করাচীতে, বেড়ে উঠেছে সৌদি আরবে।

আন্তর্জাতিক গবেষণা সংস্থা 'ইন্টারন্যাশনাল ক্রাইসিস গ্রুপ' তাদের এক রিপোর্টে বলছে, সংগঠনটি মূলত গড়ে উঠেছে সৌদি আরবে চলে যাওয়া রোহিঙ্গাদের দ্বারা।
মক্কায় থাকে এমন বিশ জন নেতৃস্থানীয় রোহিঙ্গা এই সংগঠনটি গড়ে তোলে। বাংলাদেশ, পাকিস্তান এবং ভারতে এদের যোগাযোগ রয়েছে।

সংগঠনটির নেতা আতাউল্লাহ 'আবু আমর জুনুনি' নামেও পরিচিত। আতাউল্লাহর বাবা রাখাইন থেকে পাকিস্তানের করাচীতে চলে যান। সেখানেই আতাউল্লাহর জন্ম। তিনি বেড়ে উঠেছেন মক্কায়। সেখানে মাদ্রাসায় পড়াশোনা করেছেন। ইউটিউবে তার একটি ভিডিও থেকে ধারণা করা হয়, রাখাইনের রোহিঙ্গারা যে ভাষায় কথা বলে সেটি এবং আরবী, এই দুটি ভাষাই তিনি অনর্গল বলতে পারেন। ২০১২ সালে আতাউল্লাহ সৌদি আরব থেকে অদৃশ্য হয়ে যান। এরপর সম্প্রতি আরাকানে নতুন করে সহিংসতা শুরু হওয়ার পর তার নাম শোনা যায়।

আরাকানে যারা এই সংগঠনটির সঙ্গে যুক্ত, তাদের আধুনিক গেরিলা যুদ্ধের প্রশিক্ষণ আছে বলে মনে করা হয়। স্থানীয় রোহিঙ্গাদের মধ্যে এই সংগঠনটির প্রতি সমর্থন এবং সহানুভূতি আছে।
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রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মির সদস্যদের গেরিলা যুদ্ধের প্রশিক্ষণ আছে বলে মনে করা হয়।
আরাকান রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মি বা 'আরসা' গত মার্চে এক বিবৃতিতে একেবারে খোলাখুলিই জানিয়েছে তারা মিয়ানমারে রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমদের অধিকার রক্ষায় কাজ করছে এবং তাদের 'আত্মরক্ষা-মূলক' হামলার মূল টার্গেট হচ্ছে মিয়ানমারের 'নিপীড়নকারী শাসকগোষ্ঠী।'

আরসার প্রধান দাবি হচ্ছে মিয়ানমারে রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমদের নাগরিকত্ব এবং সমান মর্যাদা দিতে হবে।
'আরসা' তাদের এই বিবৃতিতে আরও বলেছে, তারা বেসামরিক নাগরিকদের বিরুদ্ধে কোন ধরণের সন্ত্রাসবাদী কাজে লিপ্ত নয়। তাদের অধিকার আদায়ের জন্যও তারা সন্ত্রাসবাদে বিশ্বাসী নয়। বিশ্বের কোন সন্ত্রাসবাদী গোষ্ঠীর সঙ্গেও তাদের কোন সম্পর্ক নেই।

এমনকি তারা রাখাইনের বিভিন্ন ধর্মের ও জাতির মানুষকে এবং তাদের ধর্মীয় উপাসনার স্থানের নিরাপত্তার নিশ্চয়তাও দিচ্ছে।

লন্ডন ভিত্তিক একটি রোহিঙ্গা সংগঠন আরাকান ন্যাশনাল রোহিঙ্গা অর্গেনাইজেশনের চেয়ারম্যান নুরুল ইসলাম বিবিসি বাংলাকে বলেন, গত অক্টোবরে প্রথম রোহিঙ্গা স্যালভেশন আর্মির কথা সবাই জানতে পারে। তারা তখন একটি পুলিশ ফাঁড়ির ওপর হামলা চালিয়েছিল।

তাঁর মতে যারা এই সংগঠনে যুক্ত হয়েছে, তারা মরিয়া হয়ে এরকম একটা পথ বেছে নিয়েছে।

"মাঝে মধ্যে ইন্টারনেটে এদের বক্তব্য-বিবৃতি দেখি। এরা আরাকানে রোহিঙ্গাদের অধিকার এবং স্বাধীনতার জন্য লড়ছে।"
"এরা জঙ্গীও নয়, কোন আন্তর্জাতিক জঙ্গী গোষ্ঠীর সঙ্গেও এদের সম্পর্ক নেই। এরা আরাকানে বেড়ে উঠা একটি গোষ্ঠী যারা রোহিঙ্গাদের জন্য লড়ছে বলে দাবি করে।"

ইন্টারন্যাশনাল ক্রাইসিস গ্রুপ বলছে, রোহিঙ্গাদের মধ্যে সংগঠিত সশস্ত্র গোষ্ঠীর উত্থান পুরো আরাকানের পরিস্থিতিকে আরও জটিল করে তুলতে পারে। মিয়ানমারের সরকার যদি রাজনৈতিক সমাধানের পরিবর্তে নির্বিচার সামরিক বল প্রয়োগের মাধ্যমে এদের দমন করতে যায়, তাতে বরং সেখানে চক্রাকারে সহিংসতার মাত্রা আরও বাড়বে।

http://www.bbc.com/bengali/news-41060842?ocid=socialflow_facebook
 
শরণার্থী রোহিঙ্গা নারীরা জানেন না তাদের স্বামী-সন্তানরা কোথায় গেছে
মীর সাব্বিরবিবিসি বাংলা
৩১ অগাস্ট ২০১৭

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ছবির কপিরাইটREUTERS
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শরণার্থীদের মধ্যে নারী-শিশুর সংখ্যাই বেশি। কক্সবাজারের কুতুপালং ক্যাম্পের পাশের রাস্তা জুড়ে জড়ো হয়েছে শত শত রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থী। দলে দলে ভাগ হয়ে বসে থাকা এই শরণার্থীদের বেশিরভাগই নারী এবং শিশু।

বিশ জনের মতো যে শরণার্থী দলটির সঙ্গে আমার কথা হচ্ছিল, সেই দলে কোন পুরুষ নেই। প্রায় প্রতিটি নারীর কোলেই বাচ্চা।

এদের সঙ্গে কথা বলে যেটা বুঝতে পারলাম, পরিবারের পুরুষ সদস্যরা তাদের সীমান্ত পর্যন্ত পৌঁছে দিয়ে আবার মিয়ানমারে ফিরে গেছে।

শিশু কোলে এক রোহিঙ্গা তরুণীর সঙ্গে কথা হচ্ছিল। গ্রামের মানুষ যখন দল বেঁধে পালাচ্ছিল, তখন তাদের সঙ্গে চলে আসে এই তরুণী। এরপর থেকে স্বামীর সঙ্গে তার আর কোন যোগাযোগ নেই।

নুরাঙ্কিস নামের এক নারী চারটি ছোট বাচ্চাকে নিয়ে সীমান্ত পাড়ি দিয়ে এসেছেন। পথে তাদের সঙ্গী একজনের বাচ্চা পানিতে ডুবে মারা গেছে
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ছবির কপিরাইট AFP
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রাখাইনে জ্বালিয়ে দেয়া হয়েছে অনেক রোহিঙ্গা গ্রাম নুরাঙ্কিসকে বাংলাদেশ সীমান্ত পর্যন্ত পৌঁছে দিতে এসেছিলেন তার স্বামী। পথে তার স্বামীর ওপর হামলা হয়। তার পায়ে দা দিয়ে কোপানো হয়। নুরাঙ্কিস পালিয়ে এসেছেন। কিন্তু স্বামীর কোন খোঁজ পাননি এখনো।

শরণার্থীদের দলগুলোতে যে পুরুষের সংখ্যা এত কম, তার একটি ভিন্ন কারণও আছে।

মিয়ানমার সরকারের ভাষ্যমতে, রাখাইন রাজ্যে সাম্প্রতিক সহিংসতার
সূত্রপাত হয়েছিল দেশটির নিরাপত্তা বাহিনীর ওপর একটি রোহিঙ্গা জঙ্গিগোষ্ঠির হামলার মধ্য দিয়ে। এই রোহিঙ্গা নারীদের অনেকের কথায়ও বোঝা যাচ্ছে অনেক রোহিঙ্গা পুরুষ এখন এধরণের বিভিন্ন দলে যোগ দিয়ে সেনাদের সাথে লড়াই করার চেষ্টা চালাচ্ছে।

একজন রোহিঙ্গা নারী আমাকে জানালেন, তাঁর ১৪ বছরের ছেলেকে তিনি বিদায় জানিয়ে এসেছেন।
"আমার ছেলেকে আল্লাহর রাস্তায় দিয়ে এসেছি", বলছেন তিনি। "পাড়ার প্রত্যেকটি ঘর থেকে ছেলেরা গেছে। আমার ছেলেকেও দিয়েছি। ।"

এই নারী এবং শিশুদের তাদের পরিবারের পুরুষদের সাথে কবে দেখা হবে বা আদৌ দেখা হবে কিনা সেটিও অনিশ্চিত।

http://www.bbc.com/bengali/news-41101154

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Myanmar is now following Kofi-Annan team report. and preparing to award citizenship to the one who deserved it according to our law. now they again chose the war , they must get what they asked for. just pity to innocent people who want to live in peace. there're many rohingyas saved by Myanmar forces from ARSA Terrorists.

here's we gave shelter and food for innocent people in Maungdaw. they also pay back by arresting ARSA terrorists who attacked other ethnic rakhine people.

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Muslim villagers hand over suspected ARSA extremist terrorists to police force

NAY PYI TAW, 1 SEPTEMBER

Muslim villagers arrested ARSA extremist terrorists who were carrying out violent activities and handed over them to the local police force.

About 60 villagers in Maungtaw Township detained suspected terrorist identified as Rawfi Annawa, 28 years and sent him to Mingalagyi-Chaungwa police outpost at 12:50 pm on 31 August.

Similarly, local police force received a phone contact from the villagers that they captured four suspected terrorists including Hami Dullah, 22 years and Annawa Fightsell, 22 years of Tetywa Village at 4:30 pm. The police said the six men are suspected to have been involved in violent attacks.

A suspect named Adul Tarlis, 22 years of Pyinshae Village in Buthidaung Township was arrested by the village officials as he crossed over the road on Mayu mountain range at 11:30 am. He was handed over to Kinchaung police outpost.

An investigation is ongoing to take action against seven suspects in accord with the law.

(Information Committee)
https://web.facebook.com/InfomationCommittee/?ref=br_rs

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are these weapons or some farmer's tools?. allow UN team to country if Myanmar is not bias...

lol may be if they used in farm. but no need to hold them in the city. this is not arrested by police. the rohigya who want to live in peace arrested them and handed over police.
may be farming tool. but in the hand of terrorist , it may cause seriously harm to others.
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