The Free Press Journal

Rohingya refugees demand justice on crackdown anniv

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Tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees held protests here on Saturday, demanding justice on the first anniversar­y of Myanmar’s crackdown that forced them to flee to camps in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh.

Protesters in the world’s largest Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh rallied for justice and brandished a banner proclaimin­g: “Never Again”.

More than 700,000 of the minority community fled to Bangladesh after a crackdown by the Myanmar military in August 2017 that the UN has likened to “ethnic cleansing with signs of genocide through killings, rapes and the razing of houses that year”.

But the Myanmar government said it was fighting militants from the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) and was not targeting civilians.

“The Myanmar military raped and killed our women, destroyed our properties,” Rakib Hossain told BBC Bengali. “They have to be punished. We want justice.”

Ashiya Begum, whose husband was killed during the violence in Rakhine, called camp life “miserable”. “We can’t continue like this. Let us go home,” she said.

There were also religious services, with an imam reportedly asking God in his sermon to return Rohingyas to their homeland “to see our parents’ graves”.

Meanwhile, the UN renewed its appeal for aid for Rohingyas and called for support for the stateless refugees.

“Kutupalong settlement in Cox’s Bazar today shelters more than 600,000 refugees, making it the largest and most densely populated refugee settlement in the world,” said the UN Refugee Agency UNHCR.

“Over the past year, UNHCR teams have been working to support Bangladesh­i authoritie­s in areas including psycho-social counsellin­g, prevention of sexual and gender-based violence, identifica­tion of and assistance to separated and unaccompan­ied children and other vulnerable refugees,” the agency said.

It also said the joint response plan launched in March 2018, appealing for $951 million for the period from March to December 2018, was only one-third funded.

The World Health Organisati­on said that the biggest challenge was “the need to further scale up services to meet the health needs of this highly vulnerable population”.

In a statement on the anniversar­y, ARSA affirmed its intention to continue with the fight to allow the Rohingyas to return to Rakhine, and accused the Myanmar authoritie­s of looking to destroy their people.

 ?? AP/PTI ?? Rohingya refugees pray during a gathering to commemorat­e first anniversar­y of Myanmar army’s crackdown which lead a mass exodus of Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh
AP/PTI Rohingya refugees pray during a gathering to commemorat­e first anniversar­y of Myanmar army’s crackdown which lead a mass exodus of Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh

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