Regina Leader-Post

MYANMAR ACCUSED OF PLANTING LANDMINES

Injuries reported among fleeing Rohingya

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COX’S BAZAR, BANGLADESH • Myanmar’s military has been accused of planting landmines 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 landmines 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 landmine.

Myanmar has one of the few militaries, along with North Korea and Syria, which has openly used anti-personnel landmines 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.

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 landmines, but I know there have been isolated cases of Myanmar soldiers planting explosives three to four days ago,” Ariful said Friday.

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 northweste­rn 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.

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