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Rohingya rape victims preparing to give birth to 48k babies in weeks after 9 month of Myanmar attack

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Nine months after Myanmar assaults, Rohingya camps ready for spate of births

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ults-rohingya-camps-ready-for-spate-of-births

Agencies braced for spike in unwanted children who were conceived as a result of sexual violence by Myanmar soldiers and militiamen

Michael Safi in Cox's Bazar and Shaikh Azizur Rahman

Tue 1 May 2018 00.00 BSTLast modified on Tue 1 May 2018 22.00 BST

Rohingya refugee Ayesha Akhtar, 34, and her three-month-old son Fayaz inside her shack in a refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh. Photograph: Saiful Sekh for the Guardian
When hundreds of thousands of Rohingya flooded into south-east Bangladesh last year they told of systematic rape and other sexual violence by Myanmar soldiers and militiamen.

May will mark nine months since that exodus started. Aid agencies, especially those who work with women and children, have been bracing for the date. Over the next weeks, babies conceived as a result of sexual assaults committed during the crackdown will be born.

Save the Children says it is expecting the number of babies who are abandoned by their mothers to increase next month in line with the milestone. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), which runs hospitals in the sprawling Cox’s Bazar camps, is preparing to counsel affected mothers.

“They may feel they cannot care or are not equipped to care for their new baby,” says Melissa How, a medical coordinator with the doctors’ group. “Many of them are young women under the age of 18. Additionally, how they will be perceived socially due to stigma is an added stress.”

Yet they will not be the first children conceived in this way to be born in the camps. About one year ago, Ayesha Akhtar* missed her period. A few weeks earlier, the Rohingya woman says three Burmese soldiers had burst into her home in a village south of Maungdaw town, threatened to shoot her children, then raped her.


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Rohingya refugees cross the Naf river to Bangladesh last year. Photograph: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters
Similar raids had been taking place for months across Rakhine state as part of a Myanmar army crackdown beginning in November 2016.

Ayesha, a mother of five whose husband died in 2012, says the “dirty act” left her reeling. She tried keeping it from her neighbours, but they quickly guessed.

“Everyone knew the soldiers commit rape when they raid villages,” she tells the Guardian inside her tarpaulin shelter on a slope in Balukhali, one of the congested refugee camps that has swollen with new arrivals since last August.

In Myanmar, most Rohingya had little or no access to healthcare, let alone abortion services. Ayesha, 34, says she bought “medicine” from a village doctor that failed to halt the pregnancy. As a widow, she felt a particular stigma against asking other villagers for help.

“Seeking help to abort pregnancy is very difficult for a widow in our society,” she says. “I stopped searching for any way to get rid of the pregnancy and I left everything to the mercy of Allah.”

In August 2017, when she was five months’ pregnant, a new round of military raids began in her area. Like nearly 700,000 other Rohingya she fled across the border to Bangladesh.

Inside the heaving refugee camps, she again sought help to terminate the pregnancy. But by then it was too late. Bangladesh law prohibits abortion after the first trimester. Doctors warned her an illegal procedure could endanger her life.

“I had other little children at home,” she says. “I chose not to take the risk.”

Nobody knows how many women like Ayesha there are in the camps. MSF says it treated 224 victims of sexual violence up to 25 February, but acknowledges there are many more who do not seek help.


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Thousands of Rohingya women have reported being raped by Myanmar troops. Photograph: Andrew Philip/Tearfund
In January, so many women were showing up at the organisation’s hospitals bleeding that midwives speculated many were probably trying to abort their pregnancies at home.

The UN’s special envoy on sexual violence, Pramila Patten, has concluded the Myanmar army use rape as a weapon of genocide. “[It is] a calculated tool of terror aimed at the extermination and removal of the Rohingya as a group,” she says.

Earlier in April, the UN added Myanmar’s military, the Tatmadaw, to a list of armies known to commit sexual violence in armed conflict.

On 26 January, Ayesha gave birth to a boy named Fayaz*. He was healthy, despite the traumas his mother had suffered. He has an eager smile, she says. “He is very playful and jolly.”

Fayaz’s arrival divided the family, and the community. Two of Ayesha’s daughters told her the infant was not really their brother. “They said I should give him to an orphanage,” she says.

Zafar Alam, another refugee in the same part of the camp, admitted some in the area looked down on the child. “But many more have stood in support of Ayesha and her son,” he says. “We told them she was a victim.”

Her new neighbours have been comforting her. They say she isn’t the only one. “They tell me there are hundreds or thousands of Rohingya women who have been attacked in the same way,” Ayesha says.

She has been telling her daughters the same thing. “I told them this pregnancy was forced on me, and the whole world knows that. You have no reason to be embarrassed or ashamed.”

The girls are changing their minds, she says. They play with Fayaz more often. “Perhaps they also love him,” she says.

Ayesha has never doubted that she does too. “He might have been born because of a cruel act, but I can’t blame him for that,” she says. “He is innocent, just a baby. I love him like my other children. It doesn’t feel different.”

Ko Ko Linn, a Rohingya political activist based in Bangladesh, said he knew of 15 cases of women who were pregnant after being sexually assaulted by Myanmar soldiers during the military campaign that started in August. But he is certain many more are undocumented.

Surveys conducted by Human Rights Watch in November estimated two-thirds of the women who had been experienced sexual violence in Myanmar had not reported it to authorities or aid groups in Bangladesh.

Linn says children already born in these circumstances, or those who will be in the next weeks, should face no stigma.

“They will be given birth by a Rohingya mother who held them for up to 10 months, bearing all sorts of pain and hurt,” he says. “Therefore, they are sons and daughters of Rohingya.”

*Names have been changed to protect the identities of people in this story.
 
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Save the children put the figure 48,000. Two third woman hide the sexual assault initially that has created problem to provide necessary facilities to the new born babies as necessary preparation could not be taken mentioned Human Right Watch.

Nine months on, a race against time to find pregnant Rohingya rape survivors
Aid groups are preparing for a spate of births and abandoned infants
Patrick Brown/UNICEF
In-depth
The denied oppression of Myanmar’s Rohingya people
This article is part of our in-depth coverage. Read more like this...


https://www.irinnews.org/feature/20...st-time-find-pregnant-rohingya-rape-survivors

COX'S BAZAR, 16 April 2018

Kaamil Ahmed

Freelance journalist and regular IRIN contributor

Nearly nine months after Myanmar’s military was accused of widespread sexual violence in a crackdown against Rohingya communities, aid groups in Bangladesh’s Rohingya refugee camps are scrambling to identify women and girls now pregnant by rape.

“We’re kind of working against the clock before the bulk of these pregnancies will be delivering,” said Siobhan O'Malley, sexual and gender-based violence consultant with Médecins Sans Frontières.

Healthcare workers are warning of a “child protection crisis” in late May, when nine months will have passed since a military purge drove some 686,000 Rohingya people into Bangladesh from Myanmar’s Rakhine State. They fear that some rape survivors are hiding their pregnancies because of shame and stigma, and may risk giving birth in secret or abandon their babies.

Madha Khatun, 65, a Rohingya midwife who fled to Bangladesh last year, said she believes many survivors are hiding rapes and pregnancies, not just from humanitarian organisations and local authorities but also from their own communities and families.

"They won't tell anyone because they are scared about what people will think of them," she said. "They think it will stop them getting married in the future."

In a November report based on interviews with Rohingya victims of sexual violence, Human Rights Watch said two thirds of women interviewed had not reported their rape to aid groups or Bangladeshi authorities in the camps.

“A lot of these girls, because they’re young and ashamed of what happened, a lot of them are concealing these pregnancies,” O’Malley said. “Because they’re so scared of these pregnancies, they won’t try to access care."

Aid groups in the camps are planning to offer shelter to women before and after they give birth – and to care for abandoned newborns. But first they need to identify the women and girls who may need aid and then convince them to seek help.

An outcome of violence
Myanmar’s military is accused of committing systematic and widespread rape against women and girls during last year’s violent purge of Rohingya refugees from Rakhine State – part of a campaign that rights groups, UN officials, and foreign diplomats have called ethnic cleansing.

In an annual report to be discussed at the UN Security Council on Monday, 16th April, Secretary-General António Guterres puts Myanmar’s army on a watchlist of security forces and armed groups “credibly suspected” of using rape and sexual violence in conflict – a list that includes the so-called Islamic State, Boko Haram, and the Lord’s Resistance Army.

“The widespread threat and use of sexual violence was integral to their strategy, humiliating, terrorising and collectively punishing the Rohingya community and serving as a calculated tool to force them to flee their homelands and prevent their return,” Guterres says in the report. “Violence was visited upon women, including pregnant women, who are seen as custodians and propagators of ethnic identity, as well as on young children, who represent the future of the group.”

While Myanmar has barred UN investigators from entering the country, the report listed at least 70 “specific and indicative” cases of sexual violence allegedly committed by security forces in the months leading up to the August 2017 refugee exodus from Rakhine.

A stalled repatriation agreement between Bangladesh and Myanmar also specifies that “children born out of unwarranted incidents” could be eligible for returns.

Myanmar’s military has denied almost all accusations of violence; it says its operations in Rakhine were in response to attacks on border areas by a group of Rohingya militants.

The number of Rohingya rape survivors is unclear, as is the number who are now pregnant. Humanitarian aid groups reported treating hundreds of sexual violence cases in the aftermath of the August violence, but such numbers are likely vastly under-representative; many survivors never seek medical help out of shame and fear of being shunned by their families and others.


Madha Khatun, a traditional Rohingya midwife, believes women and girls are hiding rapes and pregnancies from their families and communities.
MSF alone has treated at least 230 survivors of sexual violence in the camps, including at least 162 rape survivors. O’Malley said more than half the pregnancies the group has seen involved girls younger than 18.

In the weeks after the August and September violence last year, MSF offered care to women who had tried to terminate their pregnancies themselves, resulting in incomplete or septic abortions, O’Malley said. Some women arrived at MSF clinics haemorrhaging.

“How could I live with their baby?”
MSF also cared for women like a 20-year-old now living in the camps. The woman, who did not want her name to be used, said that Myanmar soldiers shot and killed her husband during the crackdown last August, before taking her away and raping her.

"I lost my senses,” she said in an interview. “It was like I was lifeless. They did whatever they wanted with me."

Nursed to consciousness while hiding in a nearby forest, she said her husband’s family carried her to Bangladesh, where doctors with MSF told her she was pregnant. On her request, they terminated her pregnancy.

"I was raped by those Rakhine soldiers. How could I live with their baby?" she said, crouched on a small wooden stand in the hut she now shares with her husband's extended family in the sprawling camps.

MSF officials say the majority of women and girls treated with post-rape care last year were abused in Myanmar, but that now more women are seeking help for domestic abuse they’ve suffered in the refugee camps.

Yet there’s still a severe shortage of post-rape care in the overcrowded camps, according to the Interagency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crisis, which includes major agencies currently working in Bangladesh. Safe abortion, emergency contraception, and other sexual and reproductive health services are often basic, inconsistent, and sporadically available, the group says.

Racing the monsoon
Adding to these problems is the imminent monsoon season, which typically begins by May, bringing heavy rains that could douse the ramshackle camps and turn the precariously built homes and footpaths into a disaster zone.

O’Malley said the priority now is to find new ways to reach pregnant women and girls, before the weather deteriorates, to let them know help is available – a complicated task when many survivors don’t want to be found and traditional outreach and communications tactics aren’t working.

As Save the Children spokeswoman Daphnee Cook told IRIN in a written statement: "In the most tragic cases, some of these women, faced with the stigmatisation of having a baby outside of marriage and the trauma of having a child from sexual assault, have made the heartbreaking decision to abandon their babies."

Cook said her organisation has already established short-term stopgaps such as emergency shelters and foster care families for newborns. But longer-term care options are still needed, she said, adding: “there is a child protection crisis on the doorstep that urgently needs to be addressed.”

Aid workers prepare for influx of babies born of rape

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/ne...s/news-story/ee6c602360ec0b3790ec61cfee7209ef


Rohingya refugees wait for aid last September in Cox's Bazar. Picture: Getty Images
  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 20, 2018
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  • AMANDA HODGE

    Southeast Asia Correspondent
    Jakarta
    @hodgeamanda
    e77dda0d0cda6499108d6323ac86ff18
In most communities a baby boom would be a cause for celebration, but in Bangladesh’s crowded Rohingya refugee camps humanitarian workers are bracing for an anticipated peak in the birth of infants conceived out of rape.

Eight months after attacks on Myanmar posts by Rohingya militants in Rakhine state sparked a military operation that forced almost 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee Myanmar, child protection workers in Cox’s Bazar camps are dealing with the first of what they fear will be more abandoned babies.

Some newborns have been left in hospitals and fostered out to families in the camps, though it is not clear whether even those families know the infants were conceived out of sexual violence and they would still be willing to care for them if they did.

“The actual number of cases so far is not huge but for us every baby born into this situation is very important and very vulnerable,” says Save the Children’s Daphnee Cook.

“There is already a child protection crisis in these camps, there are traumatised kids everywhere. On top of that there is an expectation there is going to be a significant spike in babies being born and a larger group of babies on their own if they’re being left in hospitals. We need to make sure we have as much protection around these babies as possible.”

Ms Cook says Save the Children and other agencies have talked to Bangladeshi authorities to establish formal support structures for the babies.

“There is a lot of fear around these babies being identified. The risk of stigmatisation is so huge that everyone is treading extremely carefully,’’ she says.

“There is also a significant risk around trafficking or the idea that predators might come looking — we don’t want to create a market for these people.”

Humanitarian agencies estimate about 48,000 babies will be born into the Cox’s Bazar refugee camps this year. Rohingya birthrates are already high, with girls as young as 12 married off by their parents in the hope it will protect them from sexual assault. About 16,500 of those babies will be born in the three months to the end of next month — the window in which women who became pregnant as a result of sexual assault during the Myanmar military offensive are most likely to give birth.

Medicins Sans Frontiers treated 224 victims of sexual violence between August 25 and February 25, though MSF medical co-ordinator Melissa How says the numbers were most likely under-reported. About 45 per cent of them were 18 or younger.

A Human Rights watch report last November, based on interviews with Rohingya victims of sexual violence, found two-thirds of those interviewed had not reported their rape to aid groups or Bangladeshi authorities for fear of stigmatisation.

Ms How says aid workers are trying hard to convince women to give birth in clinics and has mental health services ready to help those facing the delivery of a baby born of rape. But the number of women and girls giving birth in clinics is still very low — only 23 per cent of babies born in the camps so far have been delivered in health facilities.

It is impossible to know how many unidentified pregnancies there could be within the camps, and how many of those could be a result of rape. “Unfortunately women who are sexual violence survivors and have become pregnant as a result of rape face quite a lot of barriers to using our facilities,” Ms How says. “There is certainly a risk of abandoned babies but we can’t estimate what the numbers will be.”

Myanmar’s military has been accused of murders and mass rape of Rohingya women and girls during last year’s offensive which the UN says amounts to ethnic cleansing. This week it was added to a UN watchlist of military suspected to have used rape in conflict.
 
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Are people born in Bangladesh automatically granted Bangladeshi citizenship?
 
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Are people born in Bangladesh automatically granted Bangladeshi citizenship?

No unless you have a Bangladeshi parents. Bangladesh is issuing birth certificate mentioning the new born babies as Myanmar citizens. But major problem now that emerges most mothers are abandoning these babies. So indirectly they are becoming burden to Bangladesh.
 
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No unless you have a Bangladeshi parents. Bangladesh is issuing birth certificate mentioning the new born babies as Myanmar citizens. But major problem now that emerges most mothers are abandoning these babies. So indirectly they are becoming burden to Bangladesh.

Why not grant them Bangladeshi citizenship at birth? I mean they're born and will be raised in Bangladesh, what else do they need?
 
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Why not grant them Bangladeshi citizenship at birth? I mean they're born and will be raised in Bangladesh, what else do they need?

If citizenship is given to them, next will be demanded to give citizenship to the remaining refugees which is around 1.3 million. Myanmar will be off the hook and they will force rest of the Rohingyas to Bangladesh.
 
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Why not grant them Bangladeshi citizenship at birth? I mean they're born and will be raised in Bangladesh, what else do they need?
Bangladesh can not give citizenship to Rohingyas.Otherwise it will act as an accomplice of burmese ethnic cleansing and genocide.This is a case similar to the Palestinian refugees. Palestinian refugees can not acquire citizenship of other Arab countries to preserve their 'right of return'.
 
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Taking measures for birth control of Rohingyas will be best option. Implementing two child policies and one marriage policy as long as they stay in BD. Population movement restriction and no easy access to BD citizenship. Making sure those; good eduction, sanitation, health care, food, jobs etc should be made sure. I was seeing Rohingyas women interview, they would die in water but wont return to MM from BD. This is the new reality.
 
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Shame on the leaders of Muslim nations who firstly could not defend these people and then didn't avenge them.

Particularly those nearby, like Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Ya Allah give us the means to guard the honour of our people like Muhammad Bin Qasim did all those years ago.
 
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Shame on the leaders of Muslim nations who firstly could not defend these people and then didn't avenge them.

Particularly those nearby, like Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Ya Allah give us the means to guard the honour of our people like Muhammad Bin Qasim did all those years ago.

Their country their rules, just like China is practicing.
 
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Shame on the leaders of Muslim nations who firstly could not defend these people and then didn't avenge them.

Particularly those nearby, like Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia.

Ya Allah give us the means to guard the honour of our people like Muhammad Bin Qasim did all those years ago.

Bro, this episode has brought shame on BD.:(

A strong and determined BD would have stopped the savages from even thinking about this abominable crime in the first place.
 
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Ya Allah give us the means to guard the honour of our people like Muhammad Bin Qasim did all those years ago.

Muhammad Bin Qasim was a 17 years old kid who ran back jumping out of his horse shouting " water , water" at the first proper resistance on the bank of Sindhu. It was the firm determination and master organization on Hajjaj ibn Yousuf's part along with KShatriyas Joining the rank of Muslims against the Upstart Brahminic family of Dahir delivered you Sindh.
 
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Bro, this episode has brought shame on BD.:(

A strong and determined BD would have stopped the savages from even thinking about this abominable crime in the first place.
Unfortunately all our leaders are sell outs.

Muhammad Bin Qasim was a 17 years old kid who ran back jumping out of his horse shouting " water , water" at the first proper resistance on the bank of Sindhu. It was the firm determination and master organization on Hajjaj ibn Yousuf's part along with KShatriyas Joining the rank of Muslims against the Upstart Brahminic family of Dahir delivered you Sindh.

Bhakt wet dreams. That boy conquered Sindh, the name of those he wiped out is forgotten, and those who followed ruled for 1000 years. Even today we have Pakistan and Bangladesh and your kind will forever weep thier loss.
 
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