The Star Malaysia

Myanmar rejects ceasefire call

Military ‘won’t deal with terrorists’ after rebel bid to allow aid in

- Crisis in Rakhine

COX’S BAZAR: Rohingya militants in Myanmar, whose raids sparked an army crackdown that has seen nearly 300,000 Muslim Rohingya flee to Bangladesh, declared a unilateral ceasefire but the government declared it would not negotiate with “terrorists”.

The United Nations said 294,000 bedraggled and exhausted Rohingya refugees have arrived in Bangladesh since the militants’ attacks on Myanmar security forces in neighbouri­ng Rakhine state on Aug 25 sparked a major military backlash.

Tens of thousands more are believed to be on the move inside Rakhine after more than a fortnight without shelter, food and water.

“The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (Arsa) hereby declares a temporary cessation of offensive military operations,” the group said in a statement on its Twitter account.

It urged “all humanitari­an actors” to resume aid delivery to “all victims of humanitari­an crisis irrespecti­ve of ethnic or religious background” during the onemonth ceasefire until Oct 9.

In addition to Rohingya, some 27,000 ethnic Rakhine Buddhists as well as Hindus have also fled violence in the northern part of Rakhine state.

Arsa called on Myanmar to “reciprocat­e this humanitari­an pause” in fighting.

Myanmar, which has previously labelled Arsa as “terrorists”, appeared to reject the overture.

“We have no policy to negotiate with terrorists,” Zaw Htay, a senior government spokesman, tweeted yesterday.

Aung San Suu Kyi’s government has come in for strong internatio­nal criticism over the military’s treatment of the Rohingya – including the alleged laying of mines along the border to prevent those who fled from returning.

Mainly Buddhist Myanmar does not recognise its stateless Muslim Rohingya community, labelling them “Bengalis” – illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

Rohingya refugees say the army operations against Arsa led to mass killing of civilians and the burning of hundreds of villages, sending them across the border.

Internatio­nal aid programmes in Rakhine have been severely curtailed, as the fighting tore through parts of the state.

India’s foreign ministry called for an immediate end to the violence, urging the situation “be handled with restraint and maturity”.

Thousands are arriving in Bangladesh each day, joining already overcrowde­d camps of Rohingya who have fled Myanmar over decades of troubles. The UN refugee agency UNHCR gave the latest figure of 294,000 for the new arrivals.

The UN has appealed for urgent donations of US$77mil (RM323mil).

Bangladesh already hosts around 400,000 Rohingya from previous crises.

The Red Cross in Bangladesh welcomed the ceasefire pledge as aid agencies struggle to meet the needs of an “overwhelmi­ng crisis”, battling monsoon rains to deliver relief to people who have fled with few belongings.

“How can you handle such a big influx of people? They want shelter, they want a safe place,” Misada Saif, Prevention and Communicat­ion Coordinato­r of the ICRC Bangladesh delegation, said.

Cradling her naked screaming infant, Rohingya refugee Zohra Begum was close to tears as several hundred people were ordered to leave a strip of forest alongside the beach near Shamlapur, where families were clearing land with hoes to build shelters.

“We went to all the camps but there was no place to stay. That’s why we came here,” she said.

“If we have to move from here, where will we go? We will die.”

 ??  ?? Bringing out the dead: Yusuf, a 31-year-old Rohingya man, carrying the corpse of his niece through the flooded street of a squalid camp for Rohingya refugees on the outskirts of Sittwe, Rakhine state. — AP
Bringing out the dead: Yusuf, a 31-year-old Rohingya man, carrying the corpse of his niece through the flooded street of a squalid camp for Rohingya refugees on the outskirts of Sittwe, Rakhine state. — AP
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