Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh describe 'chilling modus operandi' by Myanmar security forces

The Amnesty International has said the Rohingya eyewitnesses inside Myanmar and refugees in Bangladesh tell of a 'chilling modus operandi' by the security forces in Rakhine State.

News Deskbdnews24.com
Published : 15 Sept 2017, 06:12 PM
Updated : 15 Sept 2017, 06:14 PM

Soldiers, police and vigilante groups sometimes encircle a village and fire into the air before entering, but often just storm in and start firing in all directions, with people fleeing in panic, the Amnesty said in a statement.

"As surviving villagers desperately try to leave the area, security forces torch houses using petrol or shoulder-fired rocket launchers."

One 48-year-old man said that he witnessed army and police storm into his village of Yae Twin Kyun in northern Maungdaw township on Sep 8.

“When the military came, they started shooting at people who got very scared and started running. I saw the military shoot many people and kill two young boys. They used weapons to burn our houses. There used to be 900 houses in our village; now only 80 are left. There is no one left to even bury the bodies,” he said.

Amnesty International said it had been able to corroborate the burning by analyzing photographs taken from across the Naf River in Bangladesh, showing huge pillars of smoke rising inside Myanmar.

A Rohingya man who fled his home in Myo Thu Gyi in Maungdaw township on Aug 26 said: “The military attacked at 11am. They started shooting at houses and at people, it went on for around an hour."

"After it stopped I saw my friend dead on the road. Later, at 4pm the military started shooting again. When people fled, they burned the houses with bottles of petrol and rocket launchers. The burning continued for three days. Now there are no homes in our area – all are burned completely.”

Using satellite-detected fire data, Amnesty International was able to confirm large-scale fires in Myo Thu Gyi on Aug 28.

Disturbingly, the rights organisation said, in some areas, "local authorities appear to have warned local villages that their homes would be burnt, a clear indication that the attacks are both deliberate and planned."

In Kyein Chaung, in Maungdaw township, a 47-year-old man said the Village Administrator gathered the Rohingya villagers and informed them that the military might imminently burn their houses and encouraged them to seek shelter outside the village by the neighbouring river bank.

The next day, 50 soldiers came through the village from two sides, approached the Rohingya on the river bank and began to shoot at random as people panicked and ran, although there were few options for escape for those who could not swim across the river.

The soldiers began targeting men in the group, shooting at close range and stabbing those who had not managed to flee.

One eyewitness from Pan Kyiang village in Rathedaung township described how in the early morning on Sept 4 the military came with the village administrator: “He said by 10am today we had better leave since everything would be set on fire.”

As his family was packing up their belongings, he saw what he described as a ‘ball of fire’ hitting his house, at which point they fled in panic.

"Villagers who hid in a nearby paddy field witnessed soldiers burning houses using what appears to be rocket launchers."

Myanmar authorities have denied its security forces are responsible for the burnings and have somewhat incredibly claimed that Rohingya have been setting fire to their own homes.

“The government’s attempts to shift the blame to the Rohingya population are blatant lies. Our investigation makes it crystal clear that its own security forces, along with vigilante mobs, are responsible for burning Rohingya homes,” said Tirana Hassan.

Amnesty International has also received credible reports of Rohingya militants burning the homes of ethnic Rakhine and other minorities. However, the organisation has so far been unable to verify or corroborate these.

Meanwhile, the United Nations estimates that violence and burning of villages have forced more than 370,000 people to flee from Myanmar’s Rakhine State into Bangladesh since Aug 25.

Tens of thousands more are likely displaced and on the run inside the state. This is on top of some 87,000 people estimated to have fled in late 2016 and early 2017 during a large-scale military operation in the state.

“The numbers speak for themselves – it is no exaggeration to say that almost half a million Rohingya have had to flee their homes in just under a year.

"The crimes committed by security forces must be investigated, and perpetrators held to account. Ultimately, Myanmar must also end the systematic discrimination of Rohingya which lies at the heart of the current crisis,” said Tirana Hassan.

“It’s time for the international community to wake up to the nightmare the Rohingya are living through. The preliminary evidence points to these attacks being calculated and coordinated across multiple townships.

"There must be much more pressure on Aung San Suu Kyi and Myanmar’s military leaders who are still carrying out abuses to end this carnage."

“In a few days, Myanmar will be discussed at the UN Human Rights Council. This is an opportunity for the world to show that it has grasped the scope of the ongoing crisis and adopt a strong resolution to reflect this.

The Council must also extend the mandate of the International Fact-Finding Mission, which the Myanmar authorities should offer their full cooperation to.”