Myanmar's army kills 69 'attackers' in Rakhine state
Death toll spike comes as former UN chief Kofi Annan expresses "deep concern" over crackdown on Rohingya Muslims.
Myanmar: Rakhine state still under military lockdown. Myanmar's 1.1 million Rohingya Muslims are denied citizenship and face persecution [Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters]
Nearly 70 "violent attackers" have been killed by Myanmar's security forces in northern Rakhine state over the past week, the army said, claiming the dead were members of an armed Rohingya group.
Ten policemen and seven soldiers were also killed in clashes, the military added.
The announcement takes to 102 the tally of deaths of suspected Rohingya Muslim attackers since October 9, while the security forces' toll stands at 32, based on reports in state-owned media.
A series of skirmishes and attacks over the past week led "to the death of 69 violent attackers and the arrest of 234", the military's True News Information Team said late on Monday.
'Deep concern'
The bloodshed is the most serious since hundreds were killed in communal clashes in Rakhine in 2012.
Myanmar's 1.1 million Rohingya are denied citizenship with many of the country's majority Buddhists regarding them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
The death toll update came as former United Nations chief Kofi Annan, who chairs a commission on resolving Rakhine's problems, voiced concern at the upsurge in violence.
"I wish to express my deep concern over the recent violence in northern Rakhine state, which is plunging the state into renewed instability and creating new displacement," said Annan in a statement.
"All communities must renounce violence, and I urge the security services to act in full compliance with the rule of law," he said.
Rohingya face severe restrictions on travel and access to healthcare [Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters]
US State Department spokeswoman Elizabeth Trudeau said on Tuesday a US delegation holding previously scheduled talks in Myanmar urged the government to "improve transparency".
The US also repeated its call for an independent investigation and humanitarian access.
The violence has exposed tensions between Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi's seven-month-old civilian administration and the army, which ruled for decades and retains key powers, including control of ministries responsible for security.
Members of an investigative commission, set up by Suu Kyi in August, are in Rakhine for consultations with community members this week.
Soldiers have poured into the area along Myanmar's frontier with Bangladesh, responding to coordinated attacks on three border posts on October 9 that killed nine police officers.
They have locked down the district, where the vast majority of residents are Rohingya Muslims, shutting out aid workers and independent observers, and conducting sweeps of villages.
The Rohingya face severe restrictions on travel and access to healthcare. Many were dependent on regular nutritional and medical aid long before the outbreak of fighting in October.
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/...-attackers-rakhine-state-161115131026394.html
This Muslim purge in Myanmar is so awful you can see it from space
November 15, 2016 · 1:30 PM EST
A satellite image from Nov. 10 shows a Muslim village burned down in an arson spree allegedly committed by Myanmar’s army. According to Human Rights Watch, at least 400 buildings in Muslim-majority parts of Myanmar have been destroyed.
Credit:
Human Rights Watch/Courtesy
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If Myanmar’s notorious army is to be believed — that’s a very big if — its soldiers are facing a highly deranged adversary.
Along Myanmar’s marshy coastline, villages keep going up in flames. All of them belong to the Rohingya, a horribly persecuted Muslim group. The arsonists? Muslims themselves, according to the army.
The Rohingya, we are told, are burning their own homes to attract well-armed government platoons — and then sprinting at them with knives, berserker style, so that they can get
mowed down by the dozens.
This narrative defies logic. But it’s hard to challenge directly — and that’s how the army likes it.
Myanmar’s military has turned much of the Rohingya’s homeland into a no-go zone for aid workers and non-compliant journalists. It has become, in the words of one expert, an
“information black hole.”
Relieved of prying eyes, the military is aggressively purging Muslim villages that have been infiltrated by an
“extremist violent ideology.”
These raids began shortly after the October emergence of a
poorly armed Rohingya militant group numbering in the hundreds. According to government reports, a series of clashes have killed about 17 officers and more than 65 militants.
Simply not plausible that villagers "burned their own houses".
https://t.co/NYrqOqyUNS
— Richard Horsey (@rshorsey)
November 13, 2016
The military is now in a highly advantageous position. It brings superior firepower — columns of troops and attack choppers — to combat a ragtag group that is mostly armed with
“small guns, swords, spears and sticks.”
Furthermore, Myanmar’s predominately Buddhist citizens
appear to broadly support the army’s purges. In one of Asia’s most ethnically diverse nations, no group is as denigrated as the Rohingya.
Even fresh claims of soldiers
gang-raping Rohingya women at gunpoint have stirred little domestic outcry. One official,
speaking to the BBC, has refuted the claims by insisting Rohingya women are too “dirty” to arouse troops.
The army is operating in a void, free of critical onlookers who might defy the official narrative. However, technology offers a few ways to illuminate the facts.
Using satellite images,
Human Rights Watch has monitored the remote region where the army’s purge is ongoing. Their findings: a widespread torching of villages that has incinerated at least 400 buildings.
“These satellite images of village destruction could be the tip of the iceberg given the grave abuses being reported,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director with Human Rights Watch.
In addition to cameras orbiting the Earth, mobile phone cameras are also helping to reveal Rohingya suffering.
Shaky footage, allegedly capturing the aftermath of air strikes, appears to show the corpses of children sprawled out on the grass.
The exact nature of these videos is hard to verify. But they suggest the Rohingya death toll is not limited to wild-eyed terrorists rushing suicidally at soldiers.
The story is always the same. Troops enter Rohingya village on "clearance operations". Discover "violent attackers". Arrest or shoot.
— Jonah Fisher (@JonahFisherBBC)
November 15, 2016
The plight of the Rohingya, already among the world’s most tormented groups, appears to grow increasingly dire.
About 10 percent of the population of approximately 1 million already lives in bleak internment camps controlled by the army. Food and medicine is scarce. Travel outside is restricted. Hunger is rampant.
As for the nation’s much-celebrated pro-democracy crowd that swirls around Myanmar’s iconic, de facto leader, Aung San Suu Kyi? They have seemed largely
dismissive of Rohingya woes for years.
The emergence of inept militants, vowing to liberate their Rohingya people, has only legitimized the public’s distrust of Muslims. But there are signs that their tragedy could worsen from here.
Myanmar’s government now plans to arm and train an all-Buddhist militia in the same state the Rohingya inhabit. This new armed wing would be composed of ethnic Arakanese, Buddhists who are also native to the area.
One international monitoring group, the
International Commission of Jurists, has called this a “recipe for disaster.” But the plan is favored by one of the loudest anti-Rohingya organizations, the Arakan National Party, which favors
“inhuman acts” to rid their homeland of Muslims.
Last week, as the army stormed Muslim villages, the group found time to congratulate Donald Trump for winning the US presidential election.
“Being engulfed in Islamization and illegal immigration problems,” the
party wrote, “we the Arakanese people look up to you as a new world leader who will change the rigged system being infested with jihadi infiltrators.”
http://www.pri.org/stories/2016-11-15/muslim-purge-myanmar-so-awful-you-can-see-it-space
Around 200 Rohingya stranded at Bangladesh border
AFP on November 15, 2016, 9:15 pm
Around 200 Rohingya stranded at Bangladesh border
Dhaka (AFP) -
Around 200 Rohingya Muslims fleeing a surge in violence after security forces took control of Myanmar's Rakhine state last month are stranded at the Bangladesh border, community leaders said Tuesday.
Bangladeshi border guards pushed back the Rohingya -- mostly women and children -- to the Myanmar side on Monday, community leaders told AFP.
"We heard they are 200 in number. They are mostly women and children who were only seeking a safe place to stay. They have no homes to go back," one of the Rohingya leaders told AFP from a refugee camp in Bangladesh's Teknaf border town.
A border guard spokesman put the figure at closer to 80.
Nearly 70 people have died in clashes with security forces since the Myanmar army swooped into Rakhine state, an area along the border with Bangladesh that is home to the Muslim Rohingya minority.
Violence escalated over the weekend, with troops killing more than 30 people in two days of fighting, according to the Myanmar army.
Activists say the actual toll could be much higher, accusing troops of killing civilians, raping women and torching homes -- allegations the army denies.
Authorities have heavily restricted access to the area, making it difficult to independently verify government reports or accusations of army abuse.
The stranded Rohingya crossed the Naf River -- which divides the two countries -- by boats in the early hours of Monday and were immediately sent back by Bangladeshi border guards.
"We have stopped and pushed back around 80 Rohingya people yesterday (Monday)," border guard spokesman, Major Abu Russell Siddique, told AFP.
He said the Rohingya who were pushed back were economic migrants "looking for work and treatment", and denied the community leaders' claim that they were victims of recent violence in Rakhine.
Another border guard commander told AFP that Monday's group was the largest number of Rohingya pushed back since violence erupted in early October.
Nineteen-year-old Mohammad Towhid told AFP by phone that he also crossed in the early hours of Monday, but managed to avoid the border guards.
"They (Myanmar army) shot dead my sister before my eyes. I hid underneath heaps of cow dung during the attack. As the night fell, I rushed to the border," Towhid said, speaking from a Teknaf refugee camp.
"I left my mother alone at home. I don't know whether she survived or not," he said, adding that troops had torched hundreds of Rohingya homes.
The UN has labelled the Rohingya as one of the world's most persecuted peoples.
They are branded as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh by Myanmar's majority Buddhist population despite their long roots in the country, where they face apartheid-like restrictions on movement and are denied citizenship.
But the Bangladeshi government also refuses to register the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees living on its side of the border.
AFP
https://au.news.yahoo.com/thewest/a/33223361/around-200-rohingya-stranded-at-bangladesh-border/