Military land grab as security forces build bases on flattened Rohingya villages

March 13, 2018 HUMAN RIGHTS

Mahmud Rahman/CRS photo

 

By

Amnesty International

 

 

Myanmar’s military is involved in a land grab on a dramatic scale in Rakhine State, with the authorities building security force bases on land where Rohingya villages were burned to the ground just months ago, human rights NGO Amnesty International said in a new report published.

New eyewitness testimony and expert analysis of satellite images gathered by Amnesty in a 26-page report Remaking Rakhine State reveal how Rohingya villages have been flattened and new military construction undertaken since January in areas where hundreds of thousands fled a campaign of ethnic cleansing last year.

In a very troubling development, the Myanmar authorities have launched an operation to rapidly expand security infrastructure across Rakhine, including bases to house the military and Border Guard Police, as well as helipads. New roads and structures are being built over burned Rohingya villages and land, making it even less likely for refugees to return to their homes.

 

Tirana Hassan, Amnesty’s Crisis Response Director, said:

 

“What we are seeing in Rakhine State is a land grab by the military on a dramatic scale.

“New bases are being erected to house the very same security forces that have committed crimes against humanity against Rohingya.

“This makes the voluntary, safe and dignified return of Rohingya refugees an even more distant prospect. Not only are their homes gone, but the new construction is entrenching the already dehumanising discrimination they have faced in Myanmar.”

 

 

Villages burned and bulldozed

 

Although the violence in Rakhine State has subsided, the campaign to drive Rohingya out of their homeland – and ensure they cannot return – continues apace, and has taken on new forms.

Amnesty’s latest research reveals how whole villages of burned Rohingya houses have been bulldozed since January. Even surrounding trees and other vegetation have been removed, rendering much of the landscape unrecognisable. This raises serious concerns that the authorities are destroying evidence of crimes against the Rohingya, which could hinder future investigations.

 

Tirana Hassan said:

 

“The bulldozing of entire villages is incredibly worrying. Myanmar’s authorities are erasing evidence of crimes against humanity, making any future attempts to hold those responsible to account extremely difficult.”

Amnesty has also documented recent examples of looting, as well as deliberate burning and demolition of abandoned Rohingya homes and mosques across Rakhine.

 

 

New infrastructure for security forces

 

The pace of construction is alarming. Satellite imagery reveals how, in just a few months, new bases have been erected over torched Rohingya land with whole villages and even nearby forests cleared to make room.

Amnesty’s analysis of satellite imagery has confirmed that at least three new security bases are being built in Rakhine – two in Maungdaw Township and one in Buthidaung Township. Construction appears to have started in January.

The largest of the new bases is in the village of Ah Lel Chaung in Buthidaung Township, where eyewitnesses said the military forcibly evicted Rohingya from certain areas to make way for construction. Many of the villagers saw no option but to flee into Bangladesh.

One 31-year-old man, who fled to Bangladesh in January when the military erected a new fence and security post close to his village, said: “People are in a panic. No-one wants to stay because they are afraid of more violence against them.”

In the once mixed-ethnicity village of Inn Din – where Amnesty has documented how security forces and their proxies killed Rohingya villagers and torched their homes last September – satellite imagery shows what appears to be a new security force base being built where the Rohingya part of the village used to be.

 

 

Housing and refugee reception centres

 

Satellite imagery also shows how new refugee reception centres – meant to “welcome” Rohingya who return from Bangladesh – are surrounded by security fences and are close to areas with a heavy presence of military and border guard personnel. A massive new transit centre to temporarily house returning Rohingya is built on top of a burned Rohingya village in Maungdaw Township, and also shows signs of heightened security.

There are serious concerns that the Myanmar authorities are planning to house Rohingya in the centres for a prolonged period and restrict their freedom of movement. This has happened in the country before. Tens of thousands of Rohingya, who were driven from their homes during waves of violence in 2012, have been confined to open-air prisons in squalid displacement camps for many years. Most rely on aid for their basic needs.

Eyewitnesses also told Amnesty how non-Rohingya people were now living in new villages that have been built on burned Rohingya homes and farmland over the past months. This is of serious concern as the authorities have previously resettled members of other ethnic groups into Rakhine State as part of efforts to develop the region.

 

Tirana Hassan said:

 

“Rakhine State is one of the poorest parts of Myanmar and investment in development is sorely needed. But such efforts must benefit everyone in the state regardless of their ethnicity, not entrench the existing system of apartheid against Rohingya people.

“The remaking of Rakhine State is taking place in a shroud of secrecy. The authorities cannot be allowed to continue their campaign of ethnic cleansing in the name of ‘development’.

“The international community, and in particular each donor state, has a duty to ensure that any investment or assistance it provides does not contribute to human rights violations. Contributing to entrenching a system that systematically discriminates against Rohingya and that makes the return of refugees even less likely could amount to assisting in crimes against humanity.”

 

 

A campaign of ethnic cleansing

 

The Myanmar authorities launched a vicious campaign of ethnic cleansing little more than six months ago, on 25 August, in response to attacks by the Rohingya armed group the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army.

The military killed hundreds of women, men and children, committed rape and other forms of sexual violence against women and girls, and systematically burned hundreds of villages, committing clear crimes against humanity.

More than 670,000 people have fled into Bangladesh, where they are currently facing the prospect of forced repatriation to Myanmar.

 

 

International support for Rohingya refugees is urgently needed

 

Responding to news that UN officials have called for approximately £720 million in assistance for the huge numbers of Rohingya refugees currently in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar, Biraj Patnaik, Amnesty’s South Asia Director, said:

“The money is urgently needed to help the Rohingya refugees to be able to live in safe and adequate living conditions in the camps in Bangladesh. This is not a short-term crisis and there is little prospect of them being able to return to their homes in Rakhine any time soon.

“As the monsoon season looms, there is a great risk of landslides and floods striking the camps. The threat of diseases, such as diphtheria, measles and cholera, has to be aggressively combated with mass vaccinations and appropriate sanitation.

“The refugees also need food, clean water and healthcare. The needs of the local host communities, which have been severely affected, must also be carefully considered.

“Bangladesh cannot be abandoned to deal with this situation alone. At a time when the world’s wealthiest countries have turned refugees away, it has opened its doors to nearly a million people.

“The international community must help Bangladesh as it tends to the critical needs of the victims of ethnic cleansing.”

Last October, members of the international community pledged £250 million of the £310 million that the UN said was needed to support the immediate needs of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. The UN is set to make a fresh appeal for more financial support this week.

 

 

 

 

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Amnesty International is a non-governmental organisation focused on human rights with over 7 million members and supporters around the world. The stated objective of the organisation is “to conduct research and generate action to prevent and end grave abuses of human rights, and to demand justice for those whose rights have been violated.”

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