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Rohingya Muslims fleeing Burma being 'deliberately targeted' with landmines on border

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http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...es-border-amnesty-international-a7938836.html
Rohingya Muslims fleeing Burma being 'deliberately targeted' with landmines on border

'The Myanmar army is one of only a handful of state forces worldwide, along with North Korea and Syria, to still openly use antipersonnel landmines,' Amnesty International says

  • [URL='http://www.independent.co.uk/author/sally-hayden']Sally Hayden
[/URL]



A young Bangladeshi farmer is the latest victim of land mines along the Burmese border, in what Amnesty International says is evidence of the deliberate targeting
[URL='http://www.independent.co.uk/search/site/rohingya']Rohingya Muslims
fleeing the country.


The man, in his early 20s, had his leg blown off after stepping on a mine near the Bangladeshi village of
Baish Bari.


Another man is said to have been injured after a separate blast near Amtali village in Bangladesh, another common crossing point.




Read more




Amnesty International has accused the army in Burma - also known as Myanmar - of planting the landmines, which have caused serious injuries to a least five civilians over the past week. Two of the injured were children, Amnesty said, while there are reports of the death of another man.


“There is a reason why the use of antipersonnel landmines is illegal: they kill and maim indiscriminately and can’t distinguish between fighters and ordinary people,” said Tirana Hassan, Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Director, who has been carrying out research on the Burma-Bangladesh border


“The Myanmar army is one of only a handful of state forces worldwide, along with North Korea and Syria, to still openly use antipersonnel landmines. Authorities must immediately end this abhorrent practice against people who are already fleeing persecution."


In a separate incident on 3 September,
a woman in her 50s had her leg blown off from the knee down while crossing the border from Taung Pyo Let Wal.


Kalma, a relative, told Amnesty International the woman had gone to fetch water for a shower. “A few minutes later I heard a big explosion and I heard someone had stepped on a mine. It was only later I realised it was my mother-in-law.”


[/URL]
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/myanmar-rohingya-muslims-land-mines-1.4283021
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/myanmar-rohingya-muslims-land-mines-1.4283021
Rohingya refugees accuse Myanmar military of planting mines along escape route
Bangladeshi officials and Amnesty researchers believe new explosives were recently planted
The Associated Press Posted: Sep 10, 2017 7:37 AM ET Last Updated: Sep 10, 2017 7:37 AM ET

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Rohingya Muslim refugees wade through water after arriving by boat from Myanmar on Friday in Dakhinpara, Bangladesh. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

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Myanmar's military has been accused of planting land mines in the path of Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence in its western Rakhine state, with Amnesty International reporting two people wounded Sunday.

Refugee accounts of the latest spasm of violence in Rakhine have typically described shootings by soldiers and arson attacks on villages. But there are at least several cases that point to anti-personnel land mines or other explosives as the cause of injuries on the border with Bangladesh, where 300,000 Rohingya have fled in the past two weeks.

AP reporters on the Bangladesh side of the border on Monday saw an elderly woman with devastating leg wounds: one leg with the calf apparently blown off and the other also badly injured. Relatives said she had stepped on a land mine.

Myanmar has one of the few militaries, along with North Korea and Syria, that has openly used anti-personnel land mines in recent years, according to Amnesty. An international treaty in 1997 outlawed the use of the weapons.

Lt. Col S.M. Ariful Islam, commanding officer of the Bangladesh border guard in Teknaf, said on Friday he was aware of at least three Rohingya injured in explosions.

bangladesh-myanmar-attacks.jpg

Rohingya refugees collect water on Saturday from a tube well that was installed a few days ago at new refugee camp at Cox's Bazar Ukhia area in Bangladesh. (Bernat Armangue/Associated Press)

Bangladeshi officials and Amnesty researchers believe new explosives have been recently planted, including one that the rights group said blew off a Bangladeshi farmer's leg and another that wounded a Rohingya man. Both incidents occurred Sunday. It said at least three people including two children were injured in the past week.

"It may not be land mines, but I know there have been isolated cases of Myanmar soldiers planting explosives three to four days ago," Ariful said Friday.

Myanmar Presidential spokesman Zaw Htay did not answer phone calls seeking comment Sunday. Military spokesman Myat Min Oo said he couldn't comment without talking to his superiors. A major at the Border Guard Police headquarters in northern Maungdaw near the Bangladesh border also refused to comment.

Amnesty said that based on interviews with eyewitnesses and analysis by its own weapons experts, it believes there is "targeted use of landlines" along a narrow stretch of the north-western border of Rakhine state that is a crossing point for fleeing Rohingya.

"All indications point to the Myanmar security forces deliberately targeting locations that Rohingya refugees use as crossing points," Amnesty official Tirana Hassan said in a statement Sunday. "This a cruel and callous way of adding to the misery of people fleeing a systematic campaign of persecution."

The violence and exodus began on Aug. 25 when Rohingya insurgents attacked Myanmar police and paramilitary posts in what they said was an effort to protect their ethnic minority from persecution by security forces in the majority Buddhist country.

In response, the military unleashed what it called "clearance operations" to root out the insurgents. Accounts from refugees show the Myanmar military is also targeting civilians with shootings and wholesale burning of Rohingya villages in an apparent attempt to purge Rakhine state of Muslims.

Bloody anti-Muslim rioting that erupted in 2012 in Rakhine state forced more than 100,000 Rohingya into displacement camps in Bangladesh, where many still live today.

Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination and persecution in Myanmar and are denied citizenship despite centuries-olds roots in the Rakhine region. Myanmar denies Rohingya exist as an ethnic group and says those living in Rakhine are illegal migrants from Bangladesh.
 
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Burmese are making all the wrong move on earth. They will have to answer all of it.
 
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Maybe its time for them to understand that their future is not in Myanmar. The experiment started by the british is over.
 
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I am really saddened over the silence of international community on killing of innocent people just they are being killed because they are Muslim... So international community should come forward and speak over atrocities of burmese over the minority people... such criminal silence should now end by the human rights commission...
 
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Issue is Rohingyas were never properly intergrated into Burmese society and the Burmese govt never tried to either. Burma should have negotiated a deal with BD on the Rohingyas so BD will take in some Rohingyas back and the rest given Burmese citizenship and settled in various parts of the country, sadly its too late now.
Planting mines in escape routes is pretty sadistic though considering they are leaving and will never return again
 
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Issue is Rohingyas were never properly intergrated into Burmese society and the Burmese govt never tried to either. Burma should have negotiated a deal with BD on the Rohingyas so BD will take in some Rohingyas back and the rest given Burmese citizenship and settled in various parts of the country, sadly its too late now.
Planting mines in escape routes is pretty sadistic though considering they are leaving and will never return again

What makes you think they will never return?

BD is 3.5 times larger economy than Myanmar and BD people hate Myanmar to the core now.
 
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What makes you think they will never return?

BD is 3.5 times larger economy than Myanmar and BD people hate Myanmar to the core now.

They were killed and chased out. Everything they own in Myanmar would be taken by the govt.
Its easier for them to settle down in BD now
 
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They were killed and chased out. Everything they own in Myanmar would be taken by the govt.
Its easier for them to settle down in BD now

Does not matter as strength will decide it in the end.

BD army pummelled Indian one in 2001 in border clash. Do not mistake BD for puny Sri Lanka.

Rohingyas will return to Myanmar to claim back their land and the only question is when.
 
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Does not matter as strength will decide it in the end.

BD army pummelled Indian one in 2001 in border clash. Do not mistake BD for puny Sri Lanka.

Rohingyas will return to Myanmar to claim back their land and the only question is when.
Not sure what SL has to do with this?o_O
No country has done anything except talk and I doubt BD will do anything as they have been watching when all of this is happening
 
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Not sure what SL has to do with this?o_O
No country has done anything except talk and I doubt BD will do anything as they have been watching when all of this is happening

BD is inherently a far more powerful country than
Myanmar. It will mete out justice to Myanmar.
Your opinions are of no value.
 
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BD is inherently a far more powerful country than
Myanmar. It will mete out justice to Myanmar.
Your opinions are of no value.
Yep my opnions are not of value but so is yours, BD being more powerful than anyone is irrelevant if it doesn't do anything. Even Indonesia is more powerful than Burma and yet its only talk and talk. Not a single country even sent a freaking ship to rescue to the Rohingyas
 
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