The Manila Times

Rohingya women find peace in ‘widows’ camp’ barred to men

- AFP

BALUKHALI, Bangladesh: It is known as “widows’ camp”—a sanctuary off limits to men settlement­s, where Rohingya women and moments of peace.

The cluster of orange tarpaulins strung across bamboo offers a safe haven for dozens of widows and young children left Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar.

They escaped atrocities likened by the UN to “ethnic cleansing” but their husbands did not, leaving them to compete for food, shelter and survival in a border zone teeming with close to one million refugees.

crossed alone after her husband of just three months was killed in an army-led crackdown on their village.

At just 18, she oversees the women-only encampment separated from other refugee tents in a crowded and dusty valley.

The sense of ownership and pride in their basic refuge is strong among the 60- odd widows, who maintain their own bathrooms, run prayer sessions and share responsibi­lity for scores of children and orphans.

“Those who have husbands can make their own accommodat­ion using bamboo and tarpaulins,” Swaleha told AFP.

“We got this by the grace of god,” she added, gesturing at the simple tents lined with thin sleeping mats and cooking utensils.

One of her primary tasks is ensuring men—even teenage boys— venture nowhere near their shelters, where the inhabitant­s are comfortabl­e enough to eschew the veil worn by most Rohingya Muslim women in public areas.

‘Sisters’ in the camp

Aid workers say women and girls are most at threat from predators and hu supervised camps.

This risk is compounded when Rohingya women—uncomforta­ble at sharing toilets with men—venture far away for privacy in the forest after dark.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration has documented cases of refugee women being lured away from the camps with promises of marriage or jobs that end instead in forced labor or sex work.

More than half the Rohingya refugees who escaped the bloodshed in Myanmar’s westernmos­t Rakhine state are women and children, the UN Women agency said. They made it out alive but not without scars. The UN Women agency says almost - lukhali camp is a victim of unimaginab­le violence—a survivor of rape, or witness to the sexual assault, murder or burning alive of their family and friends.

Mabiya Khatun, who said her husband and two sons were butchered as their village was razed by soldiers, cherished the solidarity among her “sisters” in the widows’ camp.

life,” she told AFP.

The mood shifts at talk of returning to their homeland.

to a two-year timetable for repatriati­ng some 750,000 refugees to Rakhine on a voluntary basis, but the process has stalled.

in Myanmar, some Rohingya living in the widows’ camp yearn for the lives they left behind.

whose husband and children were killed in Rakhine, said no amount of relative her ancestral lands.

“I was born there. So was my mother, father and grandparen­ts. We only came here because of the torture and killing and arson,” Kushida said.

“If we get justice for what happened, we want to go back.”

- rounded by the only people who can understand their pain.

“I won’t go back. I don’t have anything to go back to—no home, no husband, no children, nothing,” said Mabiya, who gave her age as 50.

“At least I have something like a family here.”

 ?? AFP/MUNIR UZ ZAMAN ?? Women walking inside the “widow’s camp” at the Balukhali refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district, a sanctuary off limits to men inside Bangladesh’s congested refugee settlement­s, where Rohingya women and children traumatize­d by violence find rare...
AFP/MUNIR UZ ZAMAN Women walking inside the “widow’s camp” at the Balukhali refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Ukhia district, a sanctuary off limits to men inside Bangladesh’s congested refugee settlement­s, where Rohingya women and children traumatize­d by violence find rare...

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