The News (New Glasgow)

Rohingya see no end in sight, six months after attacks began

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Their houses are often made of plastic sheets. Much of their food comes from aid agencies. Jobs are few, and there is painfully little to do. The nightmares are relentless.

But six months after their horrors began, the Rohingya Muslims who fled army attacks in Myanmar for refuge in Bangladesh feel immense consolatio­n.

“Nobody is coming to kill us, that’s for sure,” said Mohammed Amanullah, whose village was destroyed last year just before he left for Bangladesh with his wife and three children. They now live in the Kutupalong refugee camp outside the coastal city of Cox’s Bazar.

“We have peace here,” Amanullah said.

On Aug. 25, Rohingya insurgents attacked several security posts in Myanmar, killing at least 14 people. Within hours, waves of revenge attacks broke out, with the military and Buddhist mobs marauding through Rohingya villages in bloody pogroms, killing thousands, raping women and girls, and burning houses and whole villages. The aid group Doctors Without Borders has estimated that at least 6,700 Rohingya were killed in Myanmar in the first month of the violence, including at least 730 children younger than 5. The survivors flooded into Bangladesh.

Six months later, there are few signs Rohingya are going home anytime soon.

Myanmar and Bangladesh have signed an agreement to gradually repatriate Rohingya in “safety, security and dignity,” but the process has been opaque and the dangers remain. New satellite images have shown empty villages and hamlets levelled, erasing evidence of the Rohingya’s former lives. And with 700,000 having fled Myanmar since August, more Rohingya continue to flee.

So for now, the refugees wait. “If they agree to send us back, that’s fine, but is it that easy?” asked Amanullah. “Myanmar must give us citizenshi­p. That is our home. Without citizenshi­p, they will torture us again. They will kill us again.”

He said he would only return under the protection of UN peacekeepe­rs: “They must take care of us there. Otherwise it will not work. ”

Buddhist-majority Myanmar doesn’t recognize the Rohingya as an official ethnic group, and they face intense discrimina­tion and persecutio­n.

On Sunday, two female Nobel Peace laureates visited refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar and talked to rape victims. Human Rights Watch has said in a report that Myanmar security forces raped and sexually assaulted women and girls before and during major attacks on Rohingya villages.

Katia Gianneschi, a spokeswoma­n for the Nobel Women’s Initiative who accompanie­d Yemen’s Tawakkol Karman and Northern Ireland’s Mairead Maguire to the camp, said in an email that the women talked to the victims and heard their stories. Another laureate, Iran’s Shirin Ebadi, will join her colleagues on Monday.

The Nobel Women’s Initiative, establishe­d in 2006, is a platform of six female Nobel Peace laureates.

The three laureates, who are on a weeklong visit to Bangladesh to meet the refugees, especially Rohingya women, accused Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi and her country’s military of unleashing atrocities, and said the internatio­nal community should bring those responsibl­e to justice.

Minara Begum, 25, who was raped and tortured by soldiers, told reporters after the laureates’ visit that they hugged her and held her tightly and cried as they heard the stories of brutality and repression.

“They were overwhelme­d, they cried with us, they could not hold their tears,” Begum said. “I was also touched by their eagerness to know our sad stories.”

Karman said in an email Saturday that she and her colleagues were standing “in solidarity with displaced Rohingya women and calling for Rohingya women’s voices to be heard.”

She said Rohingya women are twice victimized — for being Rohingya and for being women — and “are affected by the ethnic cleansing and are also subject to high levels of sexual and gender-based violence.”

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