New evidence of ongoing ethnic cleansing as military abducts, starves and robs Rohingya

February 8, 2018 HUMAN RIGHTS

BRAC photo

 

By

Amnesty International

 

The Myanmar security forces’ devastating campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya in Rakhine State is far from over, human rights NGO Amnesty International stated, as it published fresh evidence of ongoing violations that have forced hundreds more people to flee in recent weeks.

Late last month, Amnesty interviewed 19 Rohingya men and women, recently arrived in Bangladesh, who described how forced starvation, abductions and looting of their property drove them to flee.

Humanitarian agencies have documented thousands of new arrivals over the course of December and January, and are still reporting scores of people streaming across the border to safety.

The ongoing oppression appears to be designed to make northern Rakhine State unliveable for the tens of thousands of Rohingya still there. The Myanmar military’s campaign of violence, which has driven more than 688,000 Rohingya across the border to Bangladesh since last August, is unrelenting.

Matthew Wells, Amnesty’s Senior Crisis Advisor and part of a team who have just returned from a research trip to Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, said:

“Shielded by official denials and lies, and a concerted effort to deny access to independent investigators, Myanmar’s military continues to get away with crimes against humanity. Myanmar’s security forces are building on entrenched patterns of abuse to silently squeeze out of the country as many of the remaining Rohingya as possible. Without more effective international action, this ethnic cleansing campaign will continue its disastrous march.”

Crimes against humanity committed by the military include the widespread killing of women, men, and children; rape and other forms of sexual violence against women and girls; mass deportation; and the systematic burning of villages.

 

 

Forced starvation

 

The new arrivals told Amnesty that the military’s persistent persecution finally broke their resolve, forcing them to join the exodus to Bangladesh. Almost all of them blamed the Myanmar authorities’ forced starvation of remaining Rohingya communities for creating acute food insecurity, and eventually driving them to flee.

Many new Rohingya arrivals said the breaking point came when the military then denied access to their rice fields at harvest time, in November and December. Myanmar security forces have also participated in, or facilitated, the theft of Rohingya livestock and have torched several local markets and denied access to others. All of this has devastated Rohingya livelihoods and caused food shortages.

The Myanmar authorities have further worsened the food insecurity by severely restricting humanitarian assistance to Rakhine.

Dildar Begum, 30, arrived in Bangladesh in early January after leaving Ka Kyet Bet Kan Pyin village, near Buthidaung town. She told Amnesty that her family was put in a dire financial situation when the authorities came to their house and extorted a large amount money, threatening to arrest her husband if they did not pay. The military then stopped them and other Rohingya villagers from harvesting their rice fields. She said: “We weren’t able to get food, that’s why we fled.”

 

 

Abductions of girls and women

 

Amnesty also documented three recent incidents of the Myanmar military abducting girls or young women.

In early January, soldiers forced their way into a house in Hpoe Khaung Chaung village, Buthidaung Township. As the soldiers searched the house, Hasina, 25, said they demanded at gunpoint that her uncle hand over her 15-year-old cousin, Samida. The family has not seen the girl again. The same is true of the other abducted girls and young women, making them victims of enforced disappearance.

Rohingya families from villages where the military recently abducted women and girls said they fled in fear that the abductions would continue. Given the pervasive sexual violence that has marked this and previous military campaigns against the Rohingya in Rakhine, the abduction of women and young girls raises serious concerns of a campaign of rape and sexual slavery.

 

 

Sexual violence

 

Rohingya women also told Amnesty that Myanmar soldiers subjected them to sexual violence during searches at checkpoints as they attempted to flee. Khateza, 22, arrived at a checkpoint near Sein Hnyin Pyar on around 25 January. After searching the men and robbing them, the security forces searched the women.

Khateza said: “They searched our bodies. They took off our [outer] clothes. All the young women, including me, they searched us like this – they put their hand inside [on our breasts]… I was really uncomfortable. It was so embarrassing. I was crying.”

 

 

Systematic theft from fleeing Rohingya

 

Fleeing Rohingya typically have to walk for days before reaching the coast to cross to Bangladesh by boat. Myanmar security forces have set up checkpoints along these paths where they then steal money and other valuables from each person who passes through.

More than a dozen of the Rohingya new arrivals described the worst such checkpoint as being near Sein Hnyin Pyar village tract, where many Rohingya cross the mountains that divide Buthidaung and Maungdaw Townships. They described a barbed-wire fence having been erected across a creek path there. When groups of families arrive, soldiers and Border Guard Police descend from a security force outpost on a hillside and surround them, separating men from women. The security forces then systematically rob the Rohingya of valuables.

Mohammed Salam, 37, said that when his family passed through the checkpoint near Sein Hnyin Pyar in early January, soldiers stole more than 600,000 kyats (approximately £320) from him and his wife, along with gold, a portable solar panel, and some clothes – essentially their entire wealth.

Many Rohingya said that, after robbing them, the security forces took down their names and the villages they were from. At later checkpoints, in Maungdaw Township, some new arrivals also described being photographed and, in a few cases, recorded on a video camera saying the military had not mistreated them.

 

 

Urgent need for an arms embargo and targeted sanctions

 

The governments of Bangladesh and Myanmar signed a repatriation arrangement in late November last year, then announced they would begin returns on 23 January. The government of Bangladesh delayed implementing the first phase of that plan hours before the deadline, but Myanmar has insisted it is ready to begin.

Matthew Wells said:

“The extent and range of these ongoing attacks in Rakhine show how Myanmar’s military continues to assault and undermine not just individuals, but the dignity of the Rohingya population as a whole. This lays bare why plans for organized repatriation are woefully premature.

“Since the beginning of the crisis, the international community’s response to the atrocities against the Rohingya population has been weak and ineffective, failing to grasp the severity of the situation in Rakhine or put sufficient pressure on Myanmar’s military to stop the ethnic cleansing.

“An arms embargo and targeted sanctions are urgently needed to send a message that these violations will not be tolerated. There is also an urgent need for unfettered and sustained humanitarian access throughout Rakhine.”

On 25 August last year, Myanmar’s army launched a military operation against the Rohingya civilian population across Rakhine State, after the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army attacked around 30 security force outposts.

 

 

 

 

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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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