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Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing - Updates & Discussions

Myanmar military denies atrocities against Rohingya, replaces general
SAM Staff, November 15, 2017
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Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi looks on during the 9th ASEAN UN Summit, Photo: AFP
Myanmar’s army released a report on Monday (Nov 13) denying all allegations of rape and killings by security forces, having days earlier replaced the general in charge of the operation that drove more than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh.
No reason was given for Major General Maung Maung Soe being transferred from his post as the head of Western Command in Rakhine state, where Myanmar’s military, known as the Tatmadaw, launched a sweeping counter-insurgency operation in August.

“I don’t know the reason why he was transferred,” Major General Aye Lwin, deputy director of the psychological warfare and public relation department at the Ministry of Defense, told Reuters. “He wasn’t moved into any position at present. He has been put in reserve.”

A senior U.N. official, who had toured the refugee camps in Bangladesh, on Sunday (Nov 12) accused Myanmar’s military of conducting organized mass rape and other crimes against humanity.

The Myanmar military said its own internal investigation had exonerated security forces of all accusations of atrocities. The investigators’ findings were posted on the Facebook page of the military’s commander-in-chief, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing.

The developments came ahead of a visit on Wednesday by U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. He is expected to deliver a stern message to Myanmar’s generals, over whom national leader Aung San Suu Kyi has little control.

The government in mostly Buddhist Myanmar, which is also known as Burma, regards the Rohingya as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

A senior U.N. official, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra‘ad al-Hussein, has described the army’s actions in Rakhine as a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.
SOURCE REUTERS
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/...-denies-atrocities-rohingya-replaces-general/
 
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Bangladesh PM: We are on the verge of a crisis over providing aid to Rohingyas
Agencies
Published at 07:16 PM November 15, 2017
Last updated at 08:21 AM November 16, 2017
WEB_Prime-Minister_Sheikh-Hasina_Parliament_Jatiya-Sangsad_Focus-Bangla_15.11.2017-690x450.jpg

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks at a session in parliament on November 15, 2017
Focus Bangla
The Rohingya crisis in Myanmar's Rakhine state has turned complex in the last few months due to the military crackdown and violence, said the prime minister
Bangladesh is on the verge of an unprecedented crisis over providing humanitarian assistance to hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees staying in the country’s south-east region, said Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Wednesday.

“The present situation is worse than any other time in the past,” she said in response to a question by Moulvibazar 2 lawmaker M Abdul Matin during the prime minister’s question and answer session in parliament, reported UNB.

She further said the Rohingya crisis in the Rakhine state in Myanmar had turned complex in the last few months due to the military crackdown and violence.

However, she expressed firm conviction that, despite the obstacles, her government would be able to resolve the Rohingya crisis peacefully with the help of the international community, BSS reported.

The government will also take steps for rehabilitation of the residents of Ukhiya and Teknaf upazilas in Cox’s Bazar who lost their livelihood due to the latest influx of Rohingyas in their localities, the prime minister added.

She said Bangladesh had successfully gotten the support of the international community for the repatriation of the Rohingya people back to their homeland – the Rakhine state.

“The global community stands beside Bangladesh for the generosity that we have shown to the displaced people, welcoming our steps taken to provide them with shelter,” she said at parliament.

Hasina said the international community was working together for repatriation of the Myanmar nationals to their country.

Replying to a supplementary question from Cox’s Bazar lawmaker Abdur Rahman Bodi, the prime minister said the Rohingya influx had caused substantial damage to the environment of the region the camps are located in, as well as the livelihood of local people.

Therefore, the government has decided to provide food support as well as new occupational opportunities to the local people, she added.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/11/15/bangladesh-facing-crisis-rohingya/

2:00 AM, November 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:49 AM, November 16, 2017
Evidence of genocide
Says Holocaust Memorial Museum; rights groups find Suu Kyi “complicit”

Staff Correspondent
There is "mounting evidence" of genocide against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, says a new report by US-based Holocaust Memorial Museum, after an investigation by Fortify Rights. The report calls for an immediate halt to the atrocities in Rakhine.
“Without urgent action, there's a high risk of more mass atrocities,” said Cameron Hudson, director of the Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide at the Museum in a statement yesterday.

Echoing the findings of Fortify Rights when giving evidence before a parliamentary committee, Human Rights Watch (HRW), Burma Campaign UK and other rights groups urged the government and the international community to see the Nobel laureate as “part of the problem”, The Guardian reports. It added that the military crackdown had “thousands” of Rohingyas dead, forced an exodus of 600,000 people and mentioned numerous instances of “appalling rape”.

The Rohingyas have suffered attacks and systematic violations for decades, and the international community must not fail them now when their very existence in Myanmar is threatened, Cameron said.

More than six lakh of Myanmar's one million Rohingyas have fled the country to Bangladesh since August 25. International Rescue Committee says two lakh more will arrive in the coming weeks. Some four lakh Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh in the previous years.

Fortify Rights' report titled “They Tried to Kill Us All: Atrocity Crimes against Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine State, Myanmar” is based on a year-long investigation that included more than 200 interviews documented in Myanmar and Bangladesh from October 9 to December 2016 and from August 25, 2017 to the present day.

Myanmar's military has consistently claimed its innocence and in an internal probe made public on November 13, it said it found no instances where its soldiers had shot and killed Rohingya villagers, raped women or tortured prisoners.

It denied that security forces had torched Rohingya villages or used “excessive force”. Amnesty International termed the findings a "whitewash".

The research says Myanmar state security forces and civilian perpetrators committed mass killings in dozens of villages in Maungdaw Township in 2016 and in villages throughout all three townships of northern Rakhine since August 25, 2017.

"They slit throats; burned victims alive, including infants and children; beat civilians to death; raped and gang raped women and children," says the report.

State security forces opened fire on men, women and children at close range and from a distance from land and helicopters, killing untold numbers, it added.

Survivors from some villages described how perpetrators slashed women's breasts, hacked bodies to pieces and beheaded victims, including children, the report says.

Matthew Smith of Fortify Rights said these crimes thrive on impunity and inaction. “Condemnations aren't enough. Without urgent international action towards accountability, more mass killings are likely.”

The Myanmar Army-led assault on Rohingya civilians comes in response to attacks by the Rohingya militant group, Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) on three police outposts on October 9, 2016 that left nine dead, and another attack on 30 police outposts and one army base on August 25, 2017, that left at least 12 dead.

Members of ARSA are also responsible for human rights violations, the report added.

Myanmar continues to deny the delivery of essential humanitarian aid, including food and nutrition, to affected areas of northern Rakhine State.

“These crimes won't end on their own,” said Matthew Smith.

The report suggested enacting targeted sanctions on the individuals responsible for crimes in Rakhine, instituting an arms embargo on Myanmar and referring the situation to the International Criminal Court.
SUU KYI “PART OF THE PROBLEM”
HRW, which has been documenting sexual violence against Rohingya by the Burmese military, attacked the Foreign Office and the Department for International Development (DfID) for failing to send specialist teams to speak to victims who had fled to Bangladesh, it said.

The International Rescue Committee estimated there were 75,000 victims of gender-based violence, and that 45% of the Rohingya women attending safe spaces in Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh had reported such attacks.

“Yes, I'm afraid she is complicit,” said Mark Farmaner, director of Burma Campaign UK, on Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi. He said the Nobel peace prize winner had “authoritarian tendencies”, and used repressive laws to restrict freedom of expression, pointing out that she had refused to free political prisoners, one aged 14.

“The biggest tragedy here is she is the one person in the country who really could change attitudes towards the Rohingya. She's chosen not to do that,” he added. “We've seen a change in tone but we haven't seen a change in policy.”

“I'm saying that we need to look again at the support we have given to her government,” he reportedly said.

A spokeswoman for the Foreign Office said two civilian experts had flown to Bangladesh on Tuesday, to conduct a needs assessment of the extent of sexual violence and service provision among the Rohingya. The deployment followed a visit by the head of team for the FCO's preventing sexual violence in conflict initiative to Cox's Bazar and Dhaka this month, alongside the UN secretary general's special representative on sexual violence in conflict, Pramila Patten.

Japan urges Myanmar for repatriation

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe urged Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi on Tuesday to make it possible for refugees to return to their homes in Rakhine state, reports Japan Times.

Abe also appealed to Suu Kyi in their meeting in Manila to restore order in the province and to allow access for humanitarian aid. He also assured Japan is ready to give as much support as possible to Myanmar to improve the situation in Rakhine.
http://www.thedailystar.net/backpag...efugee-crisis-condemnation-not-enough-1492021
 
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Rohingya repatriation: Myanmar places four conditions
Tribune Desk
Published at 06:20 PM November 15, 2017
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A young Rohingya woman in front of her rickety hut at Dargachhara village in Teknaf upazila, Cox's Bazar Syed Zakir Hossain/Dhaka Tribune
Bangladesh has repeatedly denied accepting such conditions
Myanmar government has placed four conditions before it proceeds with the repatriation of Rohingyas who fled their homeland and entered Bangladesh to escape persecution.

According to Kolkata-based newspaper Anandabazar, Myanmar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs Secretary U Kyaw Zeya marked the conditions as “strict” during an international conference on India-Myanmar relations in Yangon on Friday.
The conditions are-
– Those Rohingyas who can provide documented proof of long-term residence in Myanmar,

– Those Rohingyas who want to return to Rakhine of their own will,

– Those who can prove that they have relatives on the Myanmar side of the border,

– In the case of children, those who can provide evidences their parents are permanent residents of Myanmar.
Myanmar said it will take up to 300 Rohingyas back per day if they can provide the necessary documents.
However, Bangladesh has repeatedly denied accepting any such conditions.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/s...-repatriation-myanmar-places-four-conditions/
 
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Watchdogs: ‘Mounting evidence’ of Myanmar genocide
AFP
Published at 08:28 AM November 16, 2017
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A Rohingya refugee girl sits next to her mother who rests after crossing the Bangladesh-Myanmar border, in Teknaf, Bangladesh, September 6, 2017 Reuters
The 30-page report, entitled 'They tried to kill us all,' is based on more than 200 interviews with survivors and eyewitnesses, as well as international aid workers

Myanmar security forces slit the throats of Muslim Rohingya and burned victims alive, watchdogs said in a report on Wednesday that cited mounting evidence of genocide against the minority group.

The report by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and Southeast Asia-based Fortify Rights documents “widespread and systematic attacks” on Rohingya civilians between October 9 and December of last year, and from August 25 of this year.

The 30-page report, entitled “They tried to kill us all,” is based on more than 200 interviews with survivors and eyewitnesses, as well as international aid workers.

Some world leaders have already described as “ethnic cleansing” the scorched-earth military campaign against the Rohingya.
Also Read- How far will the Rohingya goodwill carry the Awami League?
Evidence gathered by Fortify Rights and the Holocaust Museum demonstrates that “Myanmar state security forces and civilian perpetrators committed crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing” during two waves of attacks in the majority Buddhist nation, the report says.

“There is mounting evidence to suggest these acts represent a genocide of the Rohingya population,” it says.

Almost 700,000 Rohingya, more than half of the population in northern Rakhine state, have been forcibly displaced since October last year when Myanmar’s army began “clearance operations” after a previously unknown group attacked and killed security officers.

Those operations were, in practice, “a mechanism to commit mass atrocities,” the report said.

“State security forces opened fire on Rohingya civilians from the land and sky. Soldiers and knife-wielding civilians hacked to death and slit the throats of Rohingya men, women, and children,” it said.

“Rohingya civilians were burned alive. Soldiers raped and gang-raped Rohingya women and girls and arbitrarily arrested men and boys en masse.”

The report said investigators from Fortify Rights and the Holocaust Museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide traveled to Rakhine and the Bangladesh-Myanmar border area, where Rohingya have fled.

It quoted eyewitness testimony of mass killings in three villages in late August.
Also Read- Packed out Rohingya camps vulnerable to fire
“When the killing was complete, soldiers moved bodies into piles and set them alight,” after soldiers reportedly murdered hundreds in one attack, the report said, adding to chilling and consistent accounts of widespread murder, rape and arson at the hands of security forces and Buddhist mobs.

Global outrage is building over the violence, while Myanmar’s army insists it has only targeted Rohingya rebels.

The watchdogs’ report came a day after Washington’s top diplomat, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, said there were “credible reports of widespread atrocities committed by Myanmar’s security forces and vigilantes.”

Speaking during a visit to Myanmar, he urged authorities there to accept an independent investigation into those allegations.

The army and administration of de facto civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi — a Nobel peace laureate — have dismissed reports of atrocities and refused to grant entry to UN investigators tasked with probing allegations of ethnic cleansing.

“Without urgent action, a risk of further outbreaks of mass atrocities exists in Rakhine state and possibly elsewhere in Myanmar,” Fortify Rights and the Holocaust Museum wrote.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/south-asia/2017/11/16/228438/
 
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Tillerson supports for Individual sanctions against Myanmar army
SAM Staff, November 16, 2017
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US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Myanmar’s State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi, right, attend a press conference in Naypyidaw on 15 November 2017, Photo: AFP
US Secretary of State Tillerson said the United States would consider individual sanctions against security forces found responsible for human rights abuses against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine State.
More than 600,000 Rohingya are now in refugee camps in Bangladesh after fleeing the Myanmar military’s clearance operations since August when a Rohingya militant group attacked 30 police outpost in northern Rakhine State, citing accounts of arbitrary killings, rapes and arson by the security forces.

To seek accountability from the army, the US announced sanctions against Myanmar’s military leadership last month, ceasing travel waivers for current and former senior leadership of the Burmese military while assessing authorities to consider economic options available to target individuals associated with the atrocities. The restrictions also include all units and officers involved in operations in northern Rakhine State to be ineligible to receive or participate in any US assistance programs.

Rex Tillerson was in Myanmar’s capital Naypyitaw on 15 November to meet with State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu kyi and military chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing.

During a joint press conference with Daw Aung San Suu kyi in the afternoon, Tillerson said all of the individual sanctions have to be evidence based.

But the Secretary of the State said he would not advise “broad-based economic sanctions” against the entire country.

“If we have credible information that we believe to be very reliable that certain individuals were responsible for certain acts that we find unacceptable, then targeted sanctions on individuals very well may be appropriate,” he said.

While reaffirming the US commitment to Myanmar’s transition and condemning the Rohingya militant attacks in August, Tillerson also called for a credible investigation into human rights abuses against Rohingya Muslims committed by Myanmar’s security forces.

“We’re deeply concerned by credible reports of widespread atrocities committed by Myanmar’s security forces and by vigilantes who were unrestrained by the security forces during the recent violence in Rakhine State,” he said.


But the Myanmar Army denied the atrocities in the internal investigation released on Monday.

After the meeting, a Facebook post of Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing said he explained to Tillerson the real situation on the ground in Rakhine, the reasons behind the exodus, the military’s cooperation with the government, repatriation and delivering aid.
SOURCE THE IRRAWADDY
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/...support-individual-sanctions-security-forces/
 
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ROHINGYA CRISIS
Human trafficking begins on both sides of border

Diplomatic Correspondent | Published: 00:47, Nov 16,2017 | Updated: 00:52, Nov 16,2017
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A member of Bangladesh Army tries to control the crowd of Rohingya refugees who wait outside of an aid distribution centre to receive aid supplies in the Palong Khali refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar on Wednesday. — Reuters photo
Human trafficking is rife among Rohingyas fleeing violence in Rakhine State as traffickers are taking them to major cities including Dhaka, Chittagong and Yangon as well as to places outside Bangladesh and Myanmar.
Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency officials said they were expecting boats carrying Rohingyas to begin arriving soon.

The Bangladesh and Myanmar governments and the international community must expedite repatriation of Rohingyas to their home in Rakhine State to contain trafficking, experts suggested.
‘Desperate men, women and children are being recruited with false offers of paid work in various industries including fishing, small commerce, begging and, in the case of girls, domestic work,’ the UN migration agency IOM said in a release on Tuesday night.

With almost no alternative source of income, ‘the refugees are willing to take whatever opportunities they are presented with, even ones that are risky, dangerous and that involve their children’, it said.
Rohingya refugees fleeing the recent outbreak of violence in Myanmar have begun arriving in Malaysia, amid warnings that this could mark the start of a dangerous new wave of people smuggling, according to Al Jazeera.

A 16-year-old boy, who arrived in Malaysia in October, has told Al Jazeera that he and about 15 other Rohingya men and women paid soldiers to smuggle them in the back of a Myanmar military truck from Rakhine state to Yangon.

Speaking to Al Jazeera on the condition of anonymity, Anwar (not his real name), said they were then passed onto different traffickers as they travelled from Myanmar, through Thailand and into Malaysia.
‘If you give them money, they will take you wherever you ask,’ he said, referring to the Myanmar military. ‘It’s because their purpose is to chase you out of the country.’

Anwar, who recently made the eight-day journey to Malaysia, said he fled his village in Buthidaung after the military set fire to his family’s home.

As people ran for their lives, Anwar lost his parents and 10 siblings, the youngest of whom is not yet one. He hasn’t heard from them since.

NGOs say traffickers are targeting Rohingyas in Myanmar and those in refugee camps in Bangladesh, where conditions are dire
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Traffickers are approaching newly arrived refugees in the camps in Bangladesh, offering passage to Malaysia for 7000 to 8000 ringgit ($1655 to $1891), according to Migrant 88, a non-government organisation with staff working in Bangladesh and Malaysia, Al Jazeera reported.
Khadijah Shamsul, a programme director for the group, knows a Rohingya man in Malaysia who recently paid a trafficker 1000 ringgit ($236) to reserve a place on a boat for his relative in Bangladesh.

Zulkifili Abu Bakar, director-general of Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency, said in a statement, ‘Yes, we are expecting them (Rohingyas). The coastguard would increase surveillance, especially in the Malaysia-Thailand border area.

In 2015, mass graves were discovered in jungle camps used by traffickers on the border between Thailand and Malaysia. The victims were believed to be mainly Rohingyas.
‘Regardless of the scale with which this takes place,’ Matthew Smith, chief executive of Fortify Rights, a non-government organisation, said, ‘there is a potential that people will find themselves in the vicinity of people who will use those methods again.’

In Bangladesh, many of the recruiters are Bangladeshi, while some are Rohingya, and many were established in the area prior to the most recent influx. The number of criminals and trafficking rings operating in the district has expanded with the population.

Once the victims of trafficking are placed at jobs, they usually find that they are not paid what was promised. They are often deprived of sleep, made to work more hours than was agreed, not allowed to leave their work premises and not allowed to contact their family.
Women and girls are often physically or sexually abused.

Some reported being forced into jobs which they never agreed to do. In one case, a number of adolescent girls, who were promised work as domestic helpers in Cox’s Bazar and Chittagong, were forced into prostitution.
Others reported being brought to locations different from the agreed destination.

Prof. Tasneem Siddiqui, chair of the Refugee and Migrating Movements Research Unit (RMMRU) under the University of Dhaka, said unaccompanied women and children in the Rohingya camps are at risk of trafficking.

She stressed the need for completing registration of Rohingyas at the earliest, convincing them that ‘getting registered is required for their safety’.

The Bangladesh and the Myanmar governments must expedite the process of Rohingya repatriation with support from the international community, Tasneem said.

The governments in Bangladesh and other countries should take all measures to prosecute the traffickers, she added.

Over 6,18,000 Rohingyas, mostly women, children and aged people, entered Bangladesh fleeing unbridled murder, arson and rape during ‘security operations’ by Myanmar military in Rakhine, what the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing, between August 25 and November 13.

The ongoing influx took the total number of undocumented Myanmar nationals and registered refugees in Bangladesh to over 10,37,000 till Sunday, according to estimates of UN agencies.

Kateryna Ardanyan, an IOM counter-trafficking expert currently deployed in Cox’s Bazar, said, ‘In the chaos of a crisis like this, trafficking is usually invisible at first, as there are so many other urgent needs like food and shelter. But agencies responding to this crisis should not wait until the number of identified victims increases.’

Rohingya refugees need preventative and proactive action now to mitigate risks of human trafficking, and the survivors need help, before this spirals out of control, she added.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/28443/human-trafficking-begins-on-both-sides-of-border

ROHINGYA CRISIS MAY GROW WORSE, CARITAS OFFICIAL WARNS
09 November 2017 | by Catholic News Service
In October, the WHO and Bangladesh's Ministry of Health launched a massive cholera vaccination program, the second-largest in history
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Although Bangladesh has welcomed a massive influx of Rohingya refugees from neighboring Myanmar in recent weeks, a Catholic aid official is worried that the welcome may soon be wearing thin.
James Gomes, regional director of Caritas, the church's charitable agency, said Bangladesh responded quickly to the surprise arrival of more than 600,000 Rohingya, most of whom fled their homes with nothing but the clothes on their backs.

"As a Bangladeshi, I'm proud of my people and my government. Even though we're densely populated, we made the quick decision to open the border and host the Rohingya. People from all over the country came forward in order to stand beside these people who had suffered so much. Without that solidarity, many more people would have died," Gomes told Catholic News Service.

Yet such hospitality is starting to be tested, Gomes said.

"We are hearing from people in the host communities that the presence of the Rohingya is having a negative impact on their daily lives. Day laborers, for example, are having a difficult time finding work because the newcomers sell their labor for less. A Bangladeshi worker was getting 600 takas (US$7) a day, but a Rohingya worker will settle for 300 or 400 takas a day," he said.

Caritas Bangladesh has hired dozens of local residents to aid with assessment and food distribution. Gomes said half of the temporary hires are refugees and half are from the host community. They are paid 900 takas a day.

The humanitarian crisis has also pushed up the local cost of living.
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A Rohingya woman carries a bag of food provided by Caritas in the Nayapara Refugee Camp near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh ©CNS

"Bus fares have gone from 10 to 20 takas, and at times you now have to wait a long time for a bus that has space. Similarly, even inexpensive foods like bananas have doubled in price, and that's causing problems for local people," Gomes said.

The refugee influx is also causing an environmental crisis, in part because the massive numbers of refugees quickly raced ahead of government efforts to channel them into organised settlements.

"In order to build their shelters and get firewood, since the first days they arrived the refugees have been cutting trees. This is going to create a huge disaster in the long run, and we've already seen people injured when heavy rains provoked mudslides," Gomes said.

Aid workers here worry about a possible health crisis. While wells with hand pumps were quickly installed in the cramped refugee camps, they are usually shallow and located close to primitive latrines. Open defecation is common.

In October, the World Health Organisation and Bangladesh's Ministry of Health and Family Welfare launched a massive cholera vaccination program, the second-largest in history. Any outbreak of disease in the camps would quickly spread to neighbouring Bangladeshi communities.

Tension between residents and the refugees has also flared into violence. On 28 October, a Bangladeshi man in Cox's Bazar was killed in an apparent dispute over land, and police arrested two newly arrived Rohingya men.

A critical element of the humanitarian response focuses on mitigating conflicts with local communities. As people line up for food distribution, a Caritas staff member addresses those in line about the dangers of human trafficking, including the problem of girls and young women being recruited into sex work.

The government, which does not refer to the Rohingya as refugees but rather as "displaced Myanmar nationals" - hoping both to sidestep some legal requirements as well as deflate any expectations that the Rohingya are here to stay - has prohibited non-Rohingya from being in the camps after 5 pm. It also has set up checkpoints to stop any Rohingya from traveling deeper into Bangladesh.

Gomes said that while tensions have grown, they have not yet reached a tipping point.

"People are not yet telling the refugees to go home. They are still trying to accommodate them. Government is working hard to meet their needs. That will continue until we can figure out how they can peacefully repatriate. Most of the refugees I have spoken with want to go back, but they first must be assured of their security," he said.

Archbishop Moses Costa of Chittagong said the church is called to do more than just help the refugees survive in Bangladesh.

"There is a lot of concern internationally, and people are coming forward to help. That's a good thing. But I would like to ask for more. It's not enough to meet their material needs. We need to put pressure on governments to create the conditions for them to safely return home," Archbishop Costa told Catholic News Service.

In late October, the archbishop spent two days visiting the refugee camps.

"The people I talked with told me they suffered persecution and rape and killings, and they are afraid to go home. Some of them were so traumatised they couldn't talk," he said.
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A woman from Myanmar feeds her child in a UN clinic for severely malnourished Rohingya children on 28 October in the Balukhali Refugee Camp near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh ©CNS

Archbishop Costa also worries about long-term problems. He said mounting resentment about the Rohingya presence has caused some tribal groups who resemble the Myanmar refugees to leave the city of Chittagong "because they are worried about revenge from the Bangladeshi people."

The archbishop said he expects Pope Francis' between 30 November to 2 December visit to Bangladesh will bring hope to the Rohingya and their new neighbours.

"He has already said that the Rohingya are some of the most persecuted people in the world, and that they are our sisters and brothers and we must respond to them," he said.

He also acknowledged that the papal visit will likely be controversial. Pope Francis will visit Myanmar before Bangladesh.

"The bishops' conference in Myanmar doesn't want the pope to even mention the word Rohingya. That in itself is evidence of the difficulties these people face. But the Holy Father constantly pushes us to attend to the needs of the poorest people, the people at the periphery. I don't know how the pope will say it, but I know that he will not be able to go without saying something. His heart is with these people," Archbishop Costa said.
http://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/8058/0/rohingya-crisis-may-grow-worse-caritas-official-warns
 
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Rohingya
US Holocaust Museum says evidence of genocide against Rohingya in Myanmar
Year-long report into atrocities accuses security forces of ‘unprecedented and systematic’ campaign of violence against Muslim population
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Rohingya Muslim children wait to receive food at Thaingkhali refugee camp in Ukhiya, Bangladesh. Photograph: AM Ahad/AP
Poppy McPherson in Yangon
Tuesday 14 November 2017 23.47 GMT
The United States Holocaust Museum says there is “mounting evidence” of genocide in Myanmar, after a year-long investigation with Southeast Asia rights group Fortify Rights into atrocities against persecuted Rohingya Muslims.
The report, published on Wednesday and based on more than 200 interviews with Rohingya and aid workers, says Myanmar’s security forces carried out an “unprecedented, widespread and systematic” campaign of violence starting in October 2016 and continuing in August this year.

Close to one million Rohingya have been pushed out of their homes in northern Rakhine state into neighbouring Bangladesh following “coordinated” attacks on villages that included mass killings, gang-rape and arson, the report says.

“The crimes detailed in this report indicate a failure of the government of Myanmar as well as the international community to properly protect civilians from mass atrocities,” it reads.

The United Nations has called the violence a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing” but stopped short of the word “genocide”, a legal definition that would require global leaders to take action under the Genocide Convention.

Genocide is defined as the intentional targeting of a community for destruction in whole or in part.

“The facts laid out in this report demonstrate that state security forces targeted the Rohingya group with several of the enumerated acts in the law of genocide,” the report says.

Andrea Gittleman, a program manager for the Holocaust Museum’s Simon-Skjodt centre for the prevention of genocide, said: “The atrocities occurring now demand the strongest of responses in order to halt the crimes, prevent future atrocities, and hold perpetrators accountable.”

A Myanmar government spokesperson could not be reached for comment on Tuesday, but the government and army have strenuously denied the allegations, saying Rohingya militants are responsible for massacres.

Matthew Smith, CEO and founder of Fortify Rights, said the Rohingya face an “existential threat”, though there had not been a final determination on genocide.

“It’s reasonable to be talking about the crime of genocide and genocide prevention, particularly in light of the evidence, which indicates the Rohingya may have been targeted for destruction,” he said.

“We’re seeing a global moral failure. The international community has failed the Rohingya. We’ve been warning about the indicators of mass atrocities for years. Rohingya communities have been warning about this for years. This could have been prevented.”

Tens of thousands of Rohingya fled to Bangladesh last year after Rohingya militants calling themselves the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army attacked police posts, prompting military “clearance operations” that amounted to a massive crackdown on the population.

When militants attacked again in August this year, thousands of soldiers from nearly 40 battalions were deployed, according to Fortify Rights and the Holocaust Museum. They moved from village to village carrying out a similar pattern of mass shootings and arson, the report said. More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since August.

“The large deployment of troops, as well as the use of RPGs [rocket-propelled grenades] would have required detailed planning and coordination and the strategic allocation of significant financial resources and arms,” the report said.

Fortify Rights and the Holocaust Museum, whose Simon-Skjodt centre works to prevent genocide around the world, singled out three villages as sites of massacres.

In Tula Toli in Maungdaw township, Myanmar soldiers are accused of slaughtering hundreds of Rohingya, including children, who were gathered on a river bank, and then burning the bodies. “Some small children were thrown into the river,” said a witness quoted in the report. “They hacked small children who were half-alive.”

The allegations are consistent with reporting by the Guardian and others.
In Rathedaung township’s Chut Pyin village, soldiers and armed civilians allegedly herded men and boys into a hut before setting it on fire.

At least 150 men and boys from Maung Nu village, Buthidaung township, were shot dead after sheltering in the house of a local leader, survivors told Fortify Rights.

On Monday, the Myanmar army published the results of an internal probe exonerating itself of any wrongdoing.

A similar internal investigation into allegations of mass killings last year found a Myanmar soldier guilty of stealing a bicycle.

Fortify Rights and the Holocaust Museum are calling for the international community to enforce targeted sanctions on military commanders and an arms embargo on the country, as well as for the United Nations security council to refer the situation to the international criminal court.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/nov/15/us-holocaust-museum-evidence-genocide-rohingya-myanmar
 
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12:59 PM, November 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:24 PM, November 16, 2017
Human Rights Watch accuses Myanmar military of widespread rape
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Rohingya refugees are spotted on an improvised raft after crossing the Bangladesh-Myanmar border, at Shah Porir Dwip near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh November 13, 2017. Photo: REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar
Reuters, United Nations
Human Rights Watch accused Myanmar security forces on Thursday of committing widespread rape against women and girls as part of a campaign of ethnic cleansing during the past three months against Rohingya Muslims in the country's Rakhine state.
The allegation in a report by the New York-based rights group echoes an accusation by Pramila Patten, the UN special envoy on sexual violence in conflict, earlier this week. Patten said sexual violence was "being commanded, orchestrated and perpetrated by the Armed Forces of Myanmar."

Myanmar's army released a report on Monday denying all allegations of rape and killings by security forces, days after replacing the general in charge of the operation that drove more than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh.

The United Nations has denounced the violence as a classic example of ethnic cleansing. The Myanmar government has denied allegations of ethnic cleansing.

Human Rights Watch spoke to 52 Rohingya women and girls who fled to Bangladesh, 29 of whom said they had been raped. All but one of the rapes were gang rapes, Human Rights Watch said.

"Rape has been a prominent and devastating feature of the Burmese military's campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya," said Skye Wheeler, women's rights emergencies researcher at Human Rights Watch and author of the report.

"The Burmese military's barbaric acts of violence have left countless women and girls brutally harmed and traumatized," she said in a statement.

Human Rights Watch called on the UN Security Council to impose an arms embargo on Myanmar and targeted sanctions against military leaders responsible for human rights violations, including sexual violence.

The 15-member council last week urged the Myanmar government to "ensure no further excessive use of military force in Rakhine state." It asked UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to report back in 30 days on the situation.

Myanmar has said the military clearance operation was necessary for national security after Rohingya militants attacked 30 security posts and an army base in Rakhine state on August 25.

Myanmar is refusing entry to a UN panel that was tasked with investigating allegations of abuses after a smaller military counteroffensive launched in October 2016.

Hala Sadak, a 15-year-old from Hathi Para village in Maungdaw Township, told Human Rights Watch that soldiers had stripped her naked and then about 10 men raped her.

She told Human Rights Watch: "When my brother and sister came to get me, I was lying there on the ground, they thought I was dead."
Related Topics
Rohingya crisis
Myanmar Rohingya refugee crisis
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all

12:47 PM, November 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 01:03 PM, November 16, 2017
UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie condemns sexual violence against Rohingya women, children
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Hollywood star and UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie on Wednesday, November 15, 2017, strongly condemns sexual violence against Rohingya women and children in Myanmar. Reuters file photo
Star Online Report
Hollywood star and UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie has strongly condemned sexual violence against Rohingya women and children in Myanmar.
Also the Co-Founder, Preventing Sexual Violence Initiative, Jolie “shared her strong views on the Rohingya victims of sexual violence,” reads a press release by Ministry of Foreign Affairs today.
Also READ: ‘Myanmar military should be brought to justice’
More than 600,000 Rohingyas have crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh since late August, driven out by a brutal military crackdown described by a top UN official as a textbook case of “ethnic cleansing”.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) special envoy told a Bangladesh delegation led by Lt Gen Mahfuzur Rahman, principal staff officer of Armed Forces Division, that she is planning to visit the Rohingya victims of sexual violence and she would mention about it condemning violence in Myanmar in her key note speech in the United Nations (UN) Peacekeeping Ministerial meeting.

“She deeply applauded Bangladesh’s generous humanitarian approach,” in dealing with Rohingya influx,” during a closed door meeting on Sexual Exploitation and Abuse with the Bangladesh delegation yesterday, the press release said.

“Angelina Jolie also congratulated Bangladesh along with Canada and UK for their leadership role in launching “women, peace and security Chief of Defence network” yesterday morning in Vancouver,” it said.

Bangladesh Delegation to the UN Peacekeeping Ministerial in Vancouver is headed by Major General (retd) Tarique Ahmed Siddique, also defense and security adviser to the prime minister, it adds.
Related Topics
Angelina Jolie
UNHCR
Myanmar Rohingya refugee crisis
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all

11:39 AM, November 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 11:50 AM, November 16, 2017
‘Myanmar military should be brought to justice’
NHRC chief says
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National Human Rights Commission Chairman Kazi Rezaul Hoque in meeting with UN Resident Coordinator to Bangladesh Mia Seppo in Dhaka on November 16, 2017. Photo: NHRC
Star Online Report
Myanmar military officials responsible for the atrocities on Rohingyas should be brought to justice, National Human Rights Commission Chairman Kazi Rezaul Hoque said today.
He made the call to UN Resident Coordinator to Bangladesh, Mia Seppo, when the latter called on the NHRC chief at his office this morning, says a press release.

Rezaul Hoque urged the UN official to uphold her support towards Bangladesh to pressure Myanmar to take back its citizens.

The UN official assured the national human rights boss that she will extend all her support from her end regarding this issue, which is now at the centre of international attention.

According to latest estimates, over 600,000 Rohingyas have fled from Myanmar and sought refuge in Bangladesh following persecution in the Rakhine state.
Related Topics
Myanmar Rohingya refugee crisis
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...-nhrc-chairman-kazi-rezaul-hoque-says-1492066

Take all thirteen to the International Criminal Court as soon as possible.
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02:16 PM, November 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:31 PM, November 16, 2017
FM to visit Rohingyas with top foreign dignitaries
Star Online Report
Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali will accompany top dignitaries of the European Union, Japan, Germany and Sweden to visit the Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar on November 19.
The dignitaries are German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallström, Japan Foreign Minister Taro Kono and High Representative of the EU Federica Mogherini.

They are all expected to arrive in Dhaka a day early, said a press release of the foreign ministry today. The combined visit of four high level delegates is the first of its kind.

During the visit, the high level delegations will interact with the Rohingya people at Kutupalong. It is hoped that the visit will garner further international support for the Rohingya community.

The high dignitaries are expected to call on the Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina after their return from Cox’s Bazar on the same day.

Bangladesh has been sheltering over 600,000 Rohingya refugees who have fled from Myanmar in face of persecution. The country is also trying to pressure Myanmar to take back its nationals.
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...ohingya-camps-top-foreign-dignitaries-1492102
 
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10:56 AM, November 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 11:15 AM, November 16, 2017
Rohingya woman in Bangladesh helps others flee Myanmar
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In this October 12, 2017, photo, Zahida Begum, left, meets with a Rohingya family she helped escape to Bangladesh as she visits them in Thangkhali, Cox's Bazar area, Bangladesh.
Begum was only 18 months old when her mother, fleeing Muslim Rohingya persecution in Myanmar, smuggled her in a fishing boat into Bangladesh.
When frantic relatives called her in late September to tell her that Myanmar soldiers were burning Rohingya villages and tens of thousands of Rohingya were fleeing, she jumped into action, making calls and raising money to arrange boats to bring 400 people to safety. Photo: AP
AP, Kutupalong
Zahida Begum doesn't remember her home village, a tiny speck amid the mountains and forests of Myanmar. She was only 18 months old when her mother smuggled her across the Naf River on a fishing boat, carrying her into Bangladesh, among hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya fleeing persecution in their home country.
Begum has been a refugee ever since. She grew up in Bangladesh's Rohingya refugee camps, and now earns a living working for a string of international aid groups. On quiet days, she's the kind of person who wanders around looking for someone to help.

So when frantic relatives called her in late September to tell her that Myanmar soldiers were burning Rohingya villages and tens of thousands of Rohingya were fleeing, the 28-year-old jumped into action.

She made calls to a half-dozen countries. She raised thousands of dollars. She called in favors and arranged for boats and smugglers.

And one day later, some 400 people — including some of Begum's relatives and other people from nearby villages — were safe.

"Had Zahida not sent those boats, we would have died in Myanmar," said 35-year-old Abdul Matlab, one of the people rescued that night.

Matlab now lives in Bangladesh with his extended family in a small shelter of bamboo and plastic tarp where they sleep huddled together on the floor.

He said from his village alone, Begum saved 70 people. But about 400 others from the village were killed by Myanmar government forces, he said.

Begum, a smiling, self-confident woman in a long black cloak and headscarf, grew up listening to stories about the persecution of Rohingya in Myanmar's Rakhine state, just across the Naf River.

Myanmar's Rohingya have been called one of the world's most persecuted minorities, a community of Muslims in a largely Buddhist country whose government refuses to recognize them as a lawful ethnic minority. Though some Rohingya families have lived in Myanmar for centuries, they are widely disparaged as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

Not long before she heard from her frantic relatives in Myanmar, Begum had heard about the start of "clearance operations" by the country's security forces that eventually led to 618,000 Rohingya fleeing their homes and crossing the border into Bangladesh. The United Nations has said Myanmar's actions appeared to be "ethnic cleansing."

Begum knew she had to act quickly. There were mothers and children trying to flee. She remembered her mother's stories of their own journey out of Myanmar in 1990, when more than 250,000 Rohingya fled to escape forced labor, rape and religious persecution.

Begum told the group she was in contact with that they should make their way toward the Naf River border and wait for more instructions.

"I called my brother-in-law, who lives abroad, and told him our brothers and sisters have arrived near the river, and asked him how we can bring them across to Bangladesh," said Begum, who works as a translator and door-to-door health educator for aid and rights organizations including Human Rights Watch.

With the help of relatives in Australia and Malaysia, Begum said she raised more than $4,000 in a matter of hours. The money was wired to her through a shady middleman who charged a hefty fee.

She then contacted a fisherman in the Bangladeshi coastal village of Shamlapur, close to her home in the congested Kutupalong refugee camp, and asked him to hire two boats and set them off toward the Myanmar border.

Eventually, 70 families were brought out in the two boats, which had traveled more than 60 kilometers (100 miles) from Bangladesh to the pickup point in Myanmar, traveling through the Bay of Bengal and along the Naf River under the night sky. The smugglers charged more than $4,200.

Begum waited for the boats in Shamlapur, and first settled the new refugees around her own bamboo-and-tarp home. Eventually, she used what was left of the money, combined with more donations she had received, to give each family $35, then sent them to another refugee camp nearby to build their own shelters.

"If they are safe and healthy, I am content," Begum said when asked why she decided to help. "Nothing makes me more happy than that."
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...-bangladesh-helps-others-flee-myanmar-1492057
 
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UN SC RESOLUTION
A road map for speedy repatriation process of Rohingyas

Abdul Hannan
The latest Security Council consensus statement, the fourth in a row in course of last three months is the most comprehensive, substantive and explicit one providing a framework of road map for speedy repatriation process of Rohingyas to their home in Myanmar.
The statement is clear and forthright with no scope for ambiguity or equivocation and calls upon the stakeholders of the crisis to get down to business in right earnest in cooperation with the UN and other relevant international organisations immediately.

The Security Council strongly condemned the violence that has caused more than 600,000 Rohingyas to flee Myanmar to Bangladesh.
The statement called on Myanmar to ensure no further excessive use of military force in Rakhine state and expressed grave concern at human rights violation.
The statement stressed the importance of bringing those responsible for human rights violation accountable.
Suu Kyi’s predictable reaction
Britain initially circulated a security resolution with similar language backed by France and the US. But the resolution was legally binding and China strongly opposed it. So Britain and France turned the resolution into a presidential statement which nonetheless remains the strongest Council statement ever on the issue, albeit without the clout and weight of a resolution.

The British and French delegations in the Council received well deserved thanks and appreciation from the permanent representative of Bangladesh for their persistent and active interest for adopting the most comprehensive statement on the matter.

The most important operative paragraph in the statement is when it urged upon the government of Myanmar to work with the government of Bangladesh and the UN to allow the voluntary return of all refugees in condition of safety and dignity to their homes in Myanmar.
The Security Council statement also urged upon Myanmar and Bangladesh to invite the UN High commissioner for refugees and other relevant international organisations to participate fully in the joint working group for implementation of repatriation process.

This last proposal rankled in the mind of Myanmar which sharply reacted that UN involvement would seriously harm the current bilateral negotiations.
Her argument is ridiculous as she wants the joint working group to remain confined to bilateral negotiation between Bangladesh and Myanmar.

The reason of Myanmar de facto leader Suu Kyi’s displeasure and adverse reaction of denunciation of council proposal as an undue pressure is not far to seek. Myanmar wants to pursue a policy of foot dragging, soft peddling and subterfuge through bilateral protracted talks. Her obduracy and intransigence on the matter is clear.
By her angry reaction she has only betrayed her hypocrisy and perfidy to thwart and frustrate the repatriation process with one pretext or another.
Follow Security Council’s roadmap
The recent Ananda Bazar disclosure of absurdity of her four conditions of verifying the bonafide of residence in Myanmar of Rohingya refugees is a case in point. But she should understand that the plight of Rohingyas is now fully internationalised and its solution involves participation of international community. There is no getting away from it.
The Security Council has provided the road map for expeditious solution of the crisis and Myanmar military authorities should implement it with unquestioning obedience.

Now during the forthcoming visit of our Foreign Minister to Myanmar, he should insist on inviting participation of UNHCR and other relevant organisations in the joint working group in accordance with the directive in the security council statement and not fall into the trap of bilateral negotiations as laid down by Myanmar as a delaying tactics.
Our civil society has always expressed concern about the potential danger of bilateral negotiations without UN and international participation to resolve the problem.

Myanmar delegation in the Council debate continued to refuse to face the reality of Rohingya situation in the face and shifted the blame on so called terrorist attacks by Rohingyas as the root cause.

Bangladesh representative Masud bin Momen regretted the continual denial by Myanmar and nailed the lie of so called terrorist attack as a fiction and figment of imagination. He said that time was of essence to solve the massive humanitarian catastrophe caused by exodus of persecuted and displaced Rohingyas to Bangladesh.
Pressures mounting on Myanmar
The pressure on Myanmar is mounting. The 3rd committee of the UN General Assembly is soon going to pass a resolution on Rohingya crisis seeking early repatriation of Rohingyas to their homes in Myanmar. The Council statement also wanted the secretary general to appoint a special representative to supervise the repatriation process.

The statement was serious when it urged upon the secretary general to report progress on the matter to the Security Council after 30 days.
Unless Myanmar wish to be consigned once again as an international pariah, she should heed the counsels of good sense, honour and dignity by the international public opinion.
Abdul Hannan is a columnist and former diplomat.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx

ROHINGYA MUSLIM REFUGEE CRISIS
Their abject plight is beyond description

Iqbal Hossain
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ACROSS the world the supremacy of photographs is unanimously recognised; however in tandem with it certainly words too can be very appositely effective as is unmistakably evident in the news reports of the print media of the country.
Over the last three months the daily newspapers of Bangladesh and the private TV channels have done an excellent job in reporting about the distress, torment, agony and sufferings of the victims of premeditated persecution, pogrom, rape and murder as part of the ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya Muslims of Arakan or Rakhaine province of Myanmar.

Genocide of Rohingya Muslims

There is “mounting evidence” of genocide of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, says a new report by US-based Holocaust Memorial Museum, after an investigation by Fortify Rights. The report calls for an immediate halt to the atrocities in Rakhine. “Without urgent action, there’s a high risk of more mass atrocities,” said Cameron Hudson, director of the Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide at the Museum in a statement.

Echoing the findings of Fortify Rights when giving evidence before a parliamentary committee, Human Rights Watch (HRW), Burma Campaign UK and other rights groups urged the government and the international community to see the Nobel laureate as “part of the problem”, The Guardian reports. It added that the military crackdown had “thousands” of Rohingyas dead, forced an exodus of 600,000 people and mentioned numerous instances of “appalling rape”.
Catastrophic decimation
The comprehensive editorial of the Holiday, dated 27 October 2017, has expressed the Rohingya crisis in a short and snappy procedure indicating the course of action. The comment entitled “Sushma Swaraj’s Visit: Rohingya crisis vis-à-vis Indo-Bangla ties” correctly states: “Veritable apocalypse of brutal decimation on a catastrophic scale of the Rohingya Muslims of Rakhaine in Myanmar through wholesale slaughter, arson, mass rapes by the military and violent Buddhists forced out the wretched humans whose ceaseless influx into Bangladesh drew extraordinarily sympathetic attention of the peoples of the world and the UN in particular.
Turkish First Lady Emine Erdogan flew 5,616km and visited Kutupalang refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar on Sep 7, 2017”.
Sultan Jalal-al Deen Shah and Rohingyas

Myanmar is distorting the history of the Rohingya Muslims. Throwing light on the actual history of the Rohingya Muslims the editorial of the Holiday enunciates, “Myanmar government continues to spread disinformation with the intent to mislead the UN and the world by concealing actual history.

In the early part of 15th century (circa 1406 AD) lower Burma’s king Meng-Sho-Ai defeated Arakanese king Meng-Shoa Mown and conquered Arakan. Later on, Mown sought military assistance from the ruler of Goud, Sultan Jalal-al Deen Shah who helped him with a commander and many soldiers who defeated Burmese king Meng-Sho-Ai, and king Mown regained his kingdom. He relocated his kingdom at Rohong from which were the people known as Rohingya and at his request the Muslim soldiers permanently settled in Arakan”.

“No pictures, no videos, no writings can explain what is happening over there. It is beyond explanation,” wrote on 20 Sept 2017 Showkat Shafi of Al Jazeera worldwide TV news netwok headquartered in Doha, Qatar. The refugees carry harrowing stories of mass killings, gang rapes and razing of whole villages, enough to break down even the most seasoned journalists.
“Textbook ethnic cleansing”
The Muslim Rohingyas who have fled “textbook ethnic cleansing” in Myanmar to arrive in makeshift camps in Bangladesh are unwanted by both countries. In Bangladesh they are a huge burden; in Myanmar they are loathed. They are not recognised as citizens by Myanmar and have lived under an apartheid system in the western Rakhine state for decades.

Historical evidence of Muslims living permanently in the area now known as Rakhine State goes back at least to the Mrauk-U kingdom of the 15th century. “Some [Muslims] were serving in the court as ministers, even prime ministers — there were generals in the army, the royal army,” Aye Lwin, a Muslim leader, interfaith activist and educator, said. “Devout Buddhist Rakhine kings, they had Muslim titles … and these kings they minted coins with Arabic inscriptions,” Aye Lwin told the ABC, Australia.

But Rakhine historians see it in a different way. Aye Chan, professor emeritus at Kanda University, said, “I never deny the existence of the Muslim community in the Mrauk-U kingdom before the Burmese conquest of the kingdom in 1785 … but it was a very small community.”
Number of orphans is disconcerting — 36.373

A general assumption is that an orphan is a child who has two departed parents; but the more all-encompassing explanations used by relief agencies tend to spotlight on a child who is deprived of parental care. An orphan is a young person under 18 years of age who has lost one or both parents.
The the Department of Social Welfare under the Social Welfare Ministry in its survey, conducted from 20 September to 10 November 2017, have enumerated the Rohingya orphans. Their number is disconcerting ___ 36.373.
Thousands of tragic episodes
Journalists Mohammad Al-Masum Molla and Mohammad Ali Jinnat wrote about four-year-old Nur Khan who squirmed in fear whenever he saw someone unfamiliar near his shack in Ukhia of Cox’s Bazar. When he came across anyone holding any object, he shuddered. The reason behind it is: five weeks ago, the child witnessed both his parents being brutally murdered.

Their father, Shahidul Amin, was a grocer in Bolly Bazar in Mangduaw, Myanmar. The day when he was killed along with his wife, their paternal grandfather asked their maternal grandmother to take the children and flee immediately. “Leave the country as soon as possible, he said. I left taking them with me,” Rafia Begum, their grandmother who brought them to Bangladesh, said.

“We crossed the border on September 1 but have not been able to contact Hasan’s grandfather ever since,” said Rafia, a widow in her 50s. Weighed down with pain and suffering, she seemed to have aged a decade in the past month.

While their grandmother spoke of the strenuous journey to escape the conflict-ridden Rakhine state, Nur Khan stared vacantly, into seemingly nothingness. He kept mum when asked what his name was. He did not wish to speak, especially to a stranger. Nur Khan seemed like he did not know who to trust outside of his immediate family.
There are thousands of such tragic episodes.
607,0001 Rohingya refugees

The influx of Rohingya Muslim refugees from northern parts of Myanmar Rakhine State into Bangladesh restarted following attacks at Myanmar Border Guard Police posts on 25 August 2017.
As of 31 October, the Inter-Sector Coordination Group (ISCG) reported that 607,0001 Rohingya refugees have entered Bangladesh since the attacks. According to ISCG’s rapid needs assessment, 58 per cent of new arrivals are children and 60 per cent are women including a high number of pregnant (3 per cent) and lactating women (7 per cent).

The atrocities of the Myanmar military forces are continuing, while Aung San Suu Kyi is silent. She is implicated in the “ethnic cleansing” of the Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar, UK lawmakers heard on 15 November 2017. Yes, I’m afraid she is complicit,” said Mark Farmaner, director of Burma Campaign UK. Rohingya crisis started in 1978 and was solved during the rule of President Ziaur Rahman.
It should be resolved permanently, and for this there should be sustained diplomatic effort to solve this predicament.
Email: iqbal_567@yahoo.com
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=4&date=0#Tid=15112

New Report: Mounting Evidence of Genocide of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar
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New Report: Mounting Evidence of Genocide of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar
International cooperation needed to halt killing and seek justice
(WASHINGTON D.C. and COX’S BAZAR, November 15, 2017) — There is “mounting evidence” of genocide against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, according to a new report published today by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and Fortify Rights.
The government of Myanmar has a responsibility to halt atrocities being perpetrated by Myanmar security forces, civilian perpetrators, and militants and hold perpetrators accountable. The international community should develop and implement a shared strategy to ensure the cessation of atrocities and advance accountability.

“The Rohingya have suffered attacks and systematic violations for decades, and the international community must not fail them now when their very existence in Myanmar is threatened” said Cameron Hudson, Director of the Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Without urgent action, there’s a high risk of more mass atrocities.”

“They Tried to Kill Us All”: Atrocity Crimes against Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine State, Myanmar is based on one year of research conducted by Fortify Rights and the United States Holocaust Museum in Myanmar and Bangladesh. More than 200 in-depth, in-person interviews—documented primarily by Fortify Rights in Myanmar and on the Myanmar-Bangladesh border—with Rohingya survivors and eyewitnesses of atrocity crimes, as well as international aid workers, informed the report.

It documents widespread and systematic attacks on Rohingya civilians from October 9 - December 2016 and from August 25, 2017 to the present day committed by Myanmar Army soldiers, police, and civilians.

“They tried to kill us all,” said “Mohammed Rafiq,” 25, from Min Gyi village in Maungdaw Township, recalling how soldiers corralled villagers in a group and opened fire on them on August 30, 2017. “There was nothing left. People were shot in the chest, stomach, legs, face, head, everywhere.”

The report reveals how Myanmar state security forces and civilian perpetrators committed mass killings in dozens of villages in Maungdaw Township in the first wave of violence in 2016 and in villages throughout all three townships of northern Rakhine State since August 25, 2017.

Myanmar Army soldiers and civilian perpetrators slit throats; burned victims alive, including infants and children; beat civilians to death; raped and gang raped women and children. State security forces opened fire on men, women, and children at close range and at a distance and from land and helicopters, killing untold numbers. Survivors from some villages described how perpetrators slashed women’s breasts, hacked bodies to pieces, and beheaded victims, including children.

“These crimes thrive on impunity and inaction,” said Matthew Smith, Chief Executive Officer of Fortify Rights. “Condemnations aren’t enough. Without urgent international action towards accountability, more mass killings are likely.”

More than half of Myanmar’s one million Rohingya have fled the country in the past nine weeks and over 700,000 Rohingya are now living as refugees in Bangladesh. Thousands are still arriving in Bangladesh weekly. Since 2012, the Government of Myanmar has confined more than 120,000 Rohingya to more than 35 internment camps throughout Rakhine State.

The Myanmar Army-led assault on Rohingya civilians comes in response to attacks by the Rohingya militant group, Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) on three police outposts on October 9, 2016 that left nine dead and another attack on 30 police outposts and one army base on August 25, 2017 that left at least 12 dead. Members of ARSA are also responsible for human rights violations.

The government of Myanmar has enforced strict restrictions on Rohingya freedom of movement, marriage, childbirth, and other aspects of daily life for decades. The authorities deny Rohingya Myanmar citizenship by law and deny their ethnic identity, claiming they are interlopers from Bangladesh and casting them as an existential threat to Buddhist culture. The government continues to deny the delivery of essential humanitarian aid, including food and nutrition, to affected areas of northern Rakhine State.

“These crimes won’t end on their own,” said Matthew Smith, Chief Executive Officer at Fortify Rights. “People of conscience in Myanmar need to do everything possible to end the abuses and culture of impunity in the country.”

Along with recommendations for the Government of Myanmar, the report details options for the international community, such as: enacting targeted sanctions on the individuals responsible for crimes in Rakhine State, instituting an arms embargo on Myanmar, and referring the situation to the International Criminal Court, which was established to investigate, try, and prosecute those responsible for atrocity crimes when the State is unwilling or unable to do so.
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/11/new-report-mounting-evidence-of.html

Chinese foreign minister to visit Myanmar, Bangladesh amid Rohingya crisis
Reuters
Published at 08:22 PM November 16, 2017
Last updated at 08:25 PM November 16, 2017
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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi REUTERS
China and Myanmar have for years maintained close economic and diplomatic relations
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi will visit Myanmar and Bangladesh from this weekend, his ministry said on Thursday, amid a crisis over Myanmar’s treatment of Rohingyas.

More than 610,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since late August, driven out by a military counter-insurgency clearance operation in Buddhist-majority Myanmar’s Rakhine State.

A top UN official has described the military’s actions as a textbook case of “ethnic cleansing”. Myanmar rejects accusations of rights abuses.

China has expressed support for what it calls the Myanmar government’s efforts to protect stability.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters that Wang would go to Bangladesh and Myanmar this weekend where he would meet his counterparts and exchange views on bilateral ties and issues of mutual regional concern.

On Monday and Tuesday, Wang would attend a meeting of Asian and European foreign ministers in the Myanmar capital of Naypyitaw, Geng added.

He did not say whether Wang would discuss the Rohingya issue.

China and Myanmar have for years maintained close economic and diplomatic relations.

The United States and other Western countries have become more engaged with Myanmar in recent years, since it began a transition to civilian government after nearly 50 years of military rule.

International concern over the Rohingya situation has grown.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called during a visit to Myanmar on Wednesday for a credible investigation into reports of human rights abuses against the Rohingya committed by Myanmar’s security forces.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/s...-minister-visit-myanmar-amid-rohingya-crisis/

Human Rights Watch accuses Myanmar army
Special Correspondent
Human Rights Watch on Thursday accused Myanmar security forces of committing widespread rape against women and girls as part of a campaign of ethnic cleansing during the past three months against Rohingya Muslims in the country’s Rakhine state.

The allegation in a report by the New York-based rights group echoes an accusation by Pramila Patten, the UN special envoy on sexual violence in conflict, earlier this week. Patten said sexual violence was ‘being commanded, orchestrated and perpetrated by the Armed Forces of Myanmar.’

Myanmar’s army released a report on Monday denying all allegations of rape and killings by security forces, days after replacing the general in charge of the operation that drove more than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh.

The United Nations has denounced the violence as a classic example of ethnic cleansing. The Myanmar government has denied allegations of ethnic cleansing.

Human Rights Watch spoke to 52 Rohingya women and girls who fled to Bangladesh, 29 of whom said they had been raped. All but one of the rapes were gang rapes, Human Rights Watch said.
‘Rape has been a prominent and devastating feature of the Burmese military’s campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya,’ said Skye Wheeler, women’s rights emergencies researcher at Human Rights Watch and author of the report.

‘The Burmese military’s barbaric acts of violence have left countless women and girls brutally harmed and traumatized,’ she said in a statement.

Human Rights Watch called on the UN Security Council to impose an arms embargo on Myanmar and targeted sanctions against military leaders responsible for human rights violations, including sexual violence.

The 15-member council last week urged the Myanmar government to ‘ensure no further excessive use of military force in Rakhine state.’ It asked UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres to report back in 30 days on the situation.

Myanmar has said the military clearance operation was necessary for national security after Rohingya militants attacked 30 security posts and an army base in Rakhine state on August 25.
Myanmar is refusing entry to a UN panel that was tasked with investigating allegations of abuses after a smaller military counteroffensive launched in October 2016.

Hala Sadak, a 15-year-old from village Hathi Para in Maungdaw Township, told Human Rights Watch that soldiers had stripped her naked and then about 10 men raped her.

She told Human Rights Watch: ‘When my brother and sister came to get me, I was lying there on the ground, they thought I was dead.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=3&date=0#Tid=15111
 
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12:00 AM, November 17, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:49 AM, November 17, 2017
Take Rohingyas back, give them citizenship
UN committee asks Myanmar in a resolution backed by 135 states, opposed by 10 including China, Russia; calls for end to military ops, human rights abuse
rohingya-web_18.jpg

A United Nations General Assembly committee on Thursday, November 16, 2017, calls on Myanmar to end military operations that have "led to the systematic violation and abuse of human rights" of Rohingya Muslims in the country's Rakhine state. Photo: REUTERS/ Navesh Chitrakar
Afp, New York
UN member-states yesterday urged Myanmar authorities to end a military campaign against the Rohingya in a resolution adopted despite opposition from China, Russia and some regional neighbours.

The General Assembly's human rights committee overwhelmingly endorsed the measure presented by Muslim countries by a vote of 135 to 10, with 26 countries abstaining.

UN member-states said they were "highly alarmed" by the violence and "further alarmed by the disproportionate use of force by the Myanmar forces" against the Rohingya.

The resolution drafted by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) called on the government to allow access for aid workers, ensure the return of all refugees and grant full citizenship rights to the Rohingyas.

It requested UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to appoint a special envoy to Myanmar.

Aside from Russia and China, Cambodia, the Philippines, Laos and Vietnam voted against the measure as did Syria, Zimbabwe and Belarus, along with Myanmar.

The non-binding measure now goes to the full assembly for debate next month.

More than 600,000 Muslim Rohingya have fled the mainly Buddhist country since the military operation was launched in Rakhine in late August.

Myanmar authorities insist the campaign was aimed at rooting out Rohingya militants who attacked police posts on August 25 but the UN has said the violence amounted to ethnic cleansing.

Addressing the committee, Saudi Ambassador Abdallah al-Mouallimi said the resolution backed a solution that recognises the "legitimate rights of Muslim citizens" in Myanmar.

Myanmar's Ambassador Hau Do Suan said his government was "making positive efforts to ease the situation" in Rakhine state, which he said was now "stable".

Earlier this month, the UN Security Council agreed on a statement calling on Myanmar to "ensure no further excessive use of military force in Rakhine state".

Britain and France had initially proposed that the council adopted a formal resolution on Myanmar but China opposed such a move.

Human Rights Watch said the vote sent "a strong message to Myanmar that the world will not stand by while its military engages in ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya".
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpa...-rohingyas-back-give-them-citizenship-1492609
 
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2:00 AM, November 17, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:40 AM, November 17, 2017
Rohingya return a long way off
Myanmar's army chief hints, says first they have to be accepted by 'real citizens'
rohingya_57.jpg

Rohingya children playfully slide down a sloping road at Balukhali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar yesterday. Photo: Reuters
Afp, Yangon
Rohingya refugees cannot return to Rakhine state until "real Myanmar citizens" are ready to accept them, the country's army chief said yesterday, casting doubt over government pledges to begin repatriating the persecuted Muslim minority.
More than 600,000 Rohingya are languishing in Bangladeshi refugee camps after fleeing a brutal Myanmar army campaign launched in late August.

The UN says the scorched-earth operation, which has left hundreds of villages burned to ash in northern Rakhine state, amounts to ethnic cleansing of the stateless minority.

But Myanmar's hardline army chief Min Aung Hlaing has steadfastly denied all allegations of abuse, insisting troops only targeted Rohingya insurgents.

He has also taken to Facebook throughout the crisis to fan anti-Rohingya sentiment among the Buddhist public, branding the Muslims as foreign interlopers from Bangladesh despite many having lived in Rakhine for generations.

Yesterday he signalled repatriation of the Rohingya was a long way off, saying their return must first be accepted by ethnic Rakhine Buddhists -- many of whom loathe the Muslim minority and are accused of aiding soldiers in torching their homes.

"Emphasis must be placed on wish of local Rakhine ethnic people who are real Myanmar citizens. Only when local Rakhine ethnic people accept it, will all the people satisfy it (sic)," the statement, written in English, said on his Facebook page.

The army commander also said Myanmar would not allow the return of all Rohingya in Bangladesh, a country that was already hosting hundreds of thousands of the minority from previous waves of persecution.

"It is impossible to accept the number of persons proposed by Bangladesh," the army statement said, after branding the refugees as "terrorists" who fled with their families.
rohingya1_3.jpg

A Rohingya boy flies a kite at the same camp. Over 600,000 Rohingyas have entered Bangladesh since the crackdown by Myanmar army began on August 25. According to Unicef, majority of the refugees are women and children. Photo: Reuters
The general's comments came a day after he met with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who on Wednesday called on the army to support efforts to return "all refugees", adding that the reports of widespread atrocities by Myanmar's soldiers were "credible".

Bangladesh and Myanmar have agreed in principle to begin repatriation but are still tussling over the details.

Questions are mounting over how many Rohingya will be allowed to return, where they will live after they homes have been burned down and how they will coexist peacefully among ethnic Rakhine neighbours.

Tensions between the two groups have simmered for years, erupting into bouts of bloodshed in 2012 that pushed more than 100,000 Rohingya into grim displacement camps.

The Muslim minority has for years suffered under discrimination from a government that denies them citizenship and severely restricts their access to work, healthcare and education.

Bangladesh vows to nab ARSA terrorists who crossed border
SAM Staff, November 17, 2017
mayanmar_counterparts_Nay_pyi_taw-300x218.jpg

Bangladesh Border Guard officials meet with their Myanmar counterparts in Nay Pyi Taw on November 15. Photo: Myanmar Times
Senior officials from the Bangladesh border guards expressed their confidence about arresting any Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) members who fled to Bangladesh, during a coordination meeting with their Myanmar counterparts in Nay Pyi Taw on 14 November.
The meeting also addressed the issue of repatriation, the situation in Rakhine and good relations.

The Bangladesh border guards assured the Myanmar government that they would arrest and put on trial suspects involved in the attacks in northern Rakhine State who have since then fled to neighbouring Bangladesh.

“They [Bangladesh border guard officials] said that they would not allow even an inch of their land to be used as shelter for terrorists,” said police brigadier general Aung Htay Myint of the cross-border crimes department of the Myanmar police.

“They assured that they would arrest and put on trial those terrorists,” he added.

The two sides also discussed the 66 suspected ARSA terrorists who have fled to Bangladesh, which was reported by the Myanmar government at a high level meeting of the ministers of Home Affairs of both countries last month in Nay Pyi Taw.

Bangladesh officials called on Myanmar to begin as soon as possible the repatriation of hundreds of thousands of Muslims from the northern Rakhine who fled after the outbreak of violence in the region.

Myanmar Brigadier General Aung Htay Myint said the two countries have already reached a mutual understanding on the issue of repatriation.

Myanmar will start the immigration inspection of refugees after signing a memorandum of understanding when the Bangladeshi Prime Minister visits Myanmar. The visit has yet to be scheduled.

Aside from the Rakhine issues, the two sides discussed strengthening cooperation between border guards from the two countries, the general said.

Should border issues arise between the two nations occur, Bangladesh’s leadership has given instructions to resolve it based on the 1982 Agreement of the two countries, said Abul Hossain, director general of Border Guards Bangladesh at the meeting.
SOURCE MYANMAR TIMES
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/11/17/bangladesh-vows-nab-arsa-terrorists-crossed-border/
 
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12:00 AM, November 17, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:49 AM, November 17, 2017
Take Rohingyas back, give them citizenship
UN committee asks Myanmar in a resolution backed by 135 states, opposed by 10 including China, Russia; calls for end to military ops, human rights abuse

rohingya-web_18.jpg

A United Nations General Assembly committee on Thursday, November 16, 2017, calls on Myanmar to end military operations that have "led to the systematic violation and abuse of human rights" of Rohingya Muslims in the country's Rakhine state. Photo: REUTERS/ Navesh Chitrakar
Afp, New York
UN member-states yesterday urged Myanmar authorities to end a military campaign against the Rohingya in a resolution adopted despite opposition from China, Russia and some regional neighbours.

The General Assembly's human rights committee overwhelmingly endorsed the measure presented by Muslim countries by a vote of 135 to 10, with 26 countries abstaining.

UN member-states said they were "highly alarmed" by the violence and "further alarmed by the disproportionate use of force by the Myanmar forces" against the Rohingya.

The resolution drafted by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) called on the government to allow access for aid workers, ensure the return of all refugees and grant full citizenship rights to the Rohingyas.

It requested UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to appoint a special envoy to Myanmar.

Aside from Russia and China, Cambodia, the Philippines, Laos and Vietnam voted against the measure as did Syria, Zimbabwe and Belarus, along with Myanmar.

The non-binding measure now goes to the full assembly for debate next month.

More than 600,000 Muslim Rohingya have fled the mainly Buddhist country since the military operation was launched in Rakhine in late August.

Myanmar authorities insist the campaign was aimed at rooting out Rohingya militants who attacked police posts on August 25 but the UN has said the violence amounted to ethnic cleansing.

Addressing the committee, Saudi Ambassador Abdallah al-Mouallimi said the resolution backed a solution that recognises the "legitimate rights of Muslim citizens" in Myanmar.

Myanmar's Ambassador Hau Do Suan said his government was "making positive efforts to ease the situation" in Rakhine state, which he said was now "stable".

Earlier this month, the UN Security Council agreed on a statement calling on Myanmar to "ensure no further excessive use of military force in Rakhine state".

Britain and France had initially proposed that the council adopted a formal resolution on Myanmar but China opposed such a move.

Human Rights Watch said the vote sent "a strong message to Myanmar that the world will not stand by while its military engages in ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya".
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpa...-rohingyas-back-give-them-citizenship-1492609


UNGA calls for end to Myanmar military operations

SAM Staff, November 17, 2017
maungdaw_mayanmar-300x200.jpg

Aerial view of a burned Rohingya village near Maungdaw, north of Rakhine state, Myanmar September 27, 2017. Photo: Reuters
A United Nations General Assembly committee on Thursday (Nov 16) called on Myanmar to end military operations that have “led to the systematic violation and abuse of human rights” of Rohingya Muslims in the country’s Rakhine state, reports Reuters.
The move revived a U.N. resolution that was dropped last year due to the country’s progress on human rights.


The General Assembly’s Third Committee, which focuses on human rights, voted 135 in favor, 10 against with 26 abstentions on the draft text that also asks U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to appoint a special envoy on Myanmar.

For 15 years the Third Committee annually adopted a resolution condemning Myanmar’s human rights record, but last year the European Union did not put forward a draft text, citing progress under the leadership of Aung San Suu Kyi.

However, in the past three months more than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to Bangladesh after the Myanmar military began an operation against Rohingya militants, who attacked 30 security posts and an army base in Rakhine state on Aug. 25.

This prompted the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation to put forward a new draft U.N. resolution, which will now be formally adopted by the 193-member General Assembly next month. The resolution deepens international pressure, but has no legal consequences.

Myanmar’s army released a report on Monday denying all allegations of rapes and killings by security forces, days after replacing the general in charge of the military operation in Rakhine state.

Top U.N. officials have denounced the violence as a classic example of ethnic cleansing. The Myanmar government has denied allegations of ethnic cleansing.

Myanmar is refusing entry to a U.N. panel that was tasked with investigating allegations of abuses after a smaller military counteroffensive launched in October 2016.

The draft resolution approved by the Third Committee on Thursday urges Myanmar to grant access. It also calls for full and unhindered humanitarian aid access and for Myanmar to grant full citizenship rights to Rohingya.

They have been denied citizenship in Myanmar, where many Buddhists regard them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

The 15-member U.N. Security Council last week urged the Myanmar government to “ensure no further excessive use of military force in Rakhine state.” It asked Guterres to report back in 30 days.

Human Rights Watch accused Myanmar security forces on Thursday of committing widespread rape against women and girls, echoing an allegation by Pramila Patten, the U.N. special envoy on sexual violence in conflict, earlier this week. Patten said sexual violence was “being commanded, orchestrated and perpetrated by the Armed Forces of Myanmar.”
SOURCE REUTERS.
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/11/17/unga-calls-end-myanmar-military-operations/
 
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Rohingya’s return depends on ‘real Myanmar citizens’: Army
Agence France-Presse .
Yangon

Published: 00:05, Nov 17,2017 | Updated: 00:42, Nov 17,2017
Rohingya refugees cannot return to Rakhine state until ‘real Myanmar citizens’ are ready to accept them, the country’s army chief said Thursday, casting doubt over government pledges to begin repatriating the persecuted Muslim minority.
More than 600,000 Rohingya are languishing in Bangladeshi refugee camps after fleeing a brutal Myanmar army campaign launched in late August.

The UN says the scorched-earth operation, which has left hundreds of villages burned to ash in northern Rakhine state, amounts to ethnic cleansing of the stateless minority.

But Myanmar’s hardline army chief Min Aung Hlaing has steadfastly denied all allegations of abuse, insisting troops only targeted Rohingya insurgents.

He has also taken to Facebook throughout the crisis to fan anti-Rohingya sentiment among the Buddhist public, branding the Muslims as foreign interlopers from Bangladesh despite many having lived in Rakhine for generations.

On Thursday he signalled repatriation of the Rohingya was a long way off, saying their return must first be accepted by ethnic Rakhine Buddhists – many of whom loathe the Muslim minority and are accused of aiding soldiers in torching their homes.

‘Emphasis must be placed on wish of local Rakhine ethnic people who are real Myanmar citizens. Only when local Rakhine ethnic people accept it, will all the people satisfy it (sic),’ the statement, written in English, said on his Facebook page.

The army commander also said Myanmar would not allow the return of all Rohingya in Bangladesh, a country that was already hosting hundreds of thousands of the minority from previous waves of persecution.

‘It is impossible to accept the number of persons proposed by Bangladesh,’ the army statement said, after branding the refugees as ‘terrorists’ who fled with their families.

The general’s comments came a day after he met with US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who on Wednesday called on the army to support efforts to return ‘all refugees’, adding that the reports of widespread atrocities by Myanmar’s soldiers were ‘credible’.

Bangladesh and Myanmar have agreed in principle to begin repatriation but are still tussling over the details.

Questions are mounting over how many Rohingya will be allowed to return, where they will live after they homes have been burned down and how they will coexist peacefully among ethnic Rakhine neighbours.

Tensions between the two groups have simmered for years, erupting into bouts of bloodshed in 2012 that pushed more than 100,000 Rohingya into grim displacement camps.

The Muslim minority has for years suffered under discrimination from a government that denies them citizenship and severely restricts their access to work, healthcare and education.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/28526/rohingyas-return-depends-on-real-myanmar-citizens-army

Gunshots heard from Northern Maungdaw of Myanmar
Our Correspondent .Cox’s Bazar
Published: 00:05, Nov 17,2017 | Updated: 00:42, Nov 17,2017
People of bordering areas in Bangladesh adjacent to Myanmar’s Maungdaw panicked as hundreds of gunshots could be heard from Northern Maungdaw areas of the Rakhine state of Myanmar early Thursday morning.
Local Border Guard Bangladesh commanding officer in-charge Major Sariful Islam Jommadar confirmed the incident.

‘Those shootings were heard from the opposite of Teknaf BGB headquarters,’ he added.
Rohingya leader Hafiz Ahmed, now living at Balukhali makeshift camp under Ukhia upazila in Cox’s Bazar, and Arfiul Islam and Faridul Alam living at Tungbrou Konakhali zero line told New Age over mobile phone that they heard hundreds of bullet shots from the Northern Maungdaw of Rakhine in the early morning.

People near borders at Tumbrou, Gungdaum, Balukhai, Thainkhali, Palongkhali and Teknaf also heard gunshots from Myanmar.

Gungdaum Union Parished chairman under Nikhyangcchari hill upazila AKM Jahangir Aziz said that they were also hearing gunshots from Myanmar side in the early morning.

Rohingya leaders said that Myanmar military and local Buddhists were firing gunshots in the air to create panic and claim that Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army attacked them.
Some 218 Rohingya refugees of 48 families entered Bangladesh early Thursday morning crossing the Naf.

Adil Chowdhury, a Rohingya community leader of Ukhia, said that such firing might increase the rate of exodus of Rohingyas. Myanmar army and Natala are creating panic at Rohingya villages by firing gunshots, he said.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/28525/gunshots-heard-from-northern-maungdaw-of-myanmar

ROHINGYA CRISIS
Malnutrition among children worrying

Mohiuddin Alamgir | Published: 00:05, Nov 17,2017 | Updated: 00:44, Nov 17,2017
28522_12.gif

A Rohingya refugee boy is fed vitamin A during a nutrition campaign at Balu Khali refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar on Thursday. — Reuters photo

The prevalence of severe acute malnutrition among Rohingya children entering Bangladesh is worrying as they live in shanties without adequate food, drinking water and sanitation facilities which expose them to further risk of malnourishment.

These Rohingya children, marginalised back in their homeland, mostly had to walk for days while fleeing ethnic cleansing in Rakhine state of Myanmar. Such exhaustion and inadequate relief assistances were some of the reasons of Rohingya children falling into severe acute malnutrition, according to UNICEF and Save the Children.

The number and rate of Rohingya children with severe acute malnutrition surpassed the estimation of international aid workers and they ring the alarm bell for expediting the relief assistance for Rohingya children to avoid any catastrophe.

UNICEF spokesperson AM Sakil Faizullah and Save the Children Bangladesh director for programme development and quality Reefat Bin Sattar told New Age on Thursday that the increasing number of Rohingya children with severe acute malnutrition was worrying.

The high rate of severe acute malnutrition has severe long-term health consequences for children and such children with medical complications needed specialised care, said Sakil Faizullah.

Against this backdrop the government along with UNICEF and other sectoral partners launched Nutrition Action Week on Thursday, to bolster nutrition interventions for Rohingya children and provide immediate support to about 17,000 under-five children suffering from severe acute malnutrition.

‘The government of Bangladesh along with development partners will do everything possible to ensure that the Rohingya children get the required nutrition support,’ health and family welfare state minister Zahid Maleque said while inaugurating the nutrition action week at Balukhali camp in Cox’s Bazar.
‘Nutrition is the right of every child,’ he added.

According to the UN estimation till Thursday, 6,20,000 Rohingyas entered Bangladesh since the beginning of the ongoing influx, what the United Nations called the world’s fastest-developing refugee emergency, on August 25.

A government handout on Wednesday, however, said that 6,30,000 Rohingyas entered Bangladesh till date.

Officials estimated that the new influx already took to 10.39 lakh the number of documented and undocumented Myanmar nationals in Bangladesh entering the country at times since 1978.
The new influx began after Myanmar security forces responded to Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army’s reported attacks on August 25 by launching violence what the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing.

Terrified, half-starved and exhausted, Rohingyas continued arriving in Bangladesh in groups trekking through hills and forests and crossing rough sea and the Naf on boat and taking shelter wherever they could in Cox’s Bazar.

UNICEF estimated that of the new arrivals, about 60 per cent were children and 30 per cent were under five years of age.

Inter Sector Coordination Group on Sunday said that they had so far identified 8,867 Rohingya children with severe acute malnutrition and many had taken treatments.

Preliminary data from a nutrition assessment conducted in the past week at the camp at Kutupalong in Cox’s Bazar showed a 7.5 per cent prevalence of life-threatening severe acute malnutrition, a rate double that seen among Rohingya child refugees in May 2017, UNICEF said on November 3.

‘The Rohingya children in the camp, who have survived horrors in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine State and a dangerous journey, here are already caught up in a catastrophe,’ said UNICEF Bangladesh representative Edouard Beigbeder.

‘Those with severe malnutrition are now at risk of dying from an entirely preventable and treatable cause,’ he said.

The rate of malnutrition among children in northern Rakhine was above the emergency thresholds, said UNICEF, adding that the condition of these children further deteriorated due to the long trekking through the border and the conditions in the camps

One in every four Rohingya children in Bangladesh is malnourished and at increased risk of death, warned Save the Children on November 2.

The assessment screened 268 children aged 6-59 months, identifying 24.3 per cent having global acute malnutrition (moderate and severe), of which 7.5 per cent was having severe acute malnutrition.

Save the Children’s Emergency Nutrition Adviser in Cox’s Bazar Nicki Connell said, ‘Large number of Rohingya children arriving in Bangladesh is already malnourished. They are put in a situation where they have to rely on food rations to survive, where hygiene standards are poor, where clean drinking water is hard to come by and lots of people are getting sick as a result.’

Sakil Faizullah said that the number of Rohingya children with severe acute malnutrition surpassed primary estimations.

‘In the early days we have estimated that about 7,000 children might suffer from severe acute malnutrition but it is increasing every day,’ he said.

‘Relief assistance for Rohingya children is still not satisfactory, but we all are trying our best to address the issue,’ said Reefat Bin Sattar.

During nutrition action week, at least 80 per cent of 176,756 children aged 06-59 months would be given Vitamin A capsules, 80 per cent of 118,427 children aged 24-59 months would be provided deworming tablets, 176,756 children aged 06-59 months would undergo nutrition screening and malnourished children would be referred for nutrition treatment programmes.

Information on important breastfeeding practices and appropriate feeding practices would also be given to the mothers, said UNICEF.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/28522/malnutrition-among-children-worrying
 
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