The Manila Times

Bulldozed Rohingya villages deepen fears

- HANDOUT AFP PHOTO / AFP

YANGON: Aerial photos of Rakhine state have emerged that appear to show several bulldozed Rohingya settlement­s, renewing accusation­s Myanmar is wiping out the homes and history of the Muslim minority.

Nearly 700,000 Rohingya have fled Myanmar’s Rakhine state to Bangladesh since insurgent attacks on police posts triggered a brutal military crackdown.

The UN has led global condemnati­on of the army action, describing it as ethnic cleansing.

Rights activists also say the systematic destructio­n of hundreds of villages, mosques and property is effectivel­y rubbing out the Rohingya’s ties to their ancestral lands.

The Muslim minority are not recognized as an ethnic group in Myanmar and have faced decades of persecutio­n.

Many fear the recent crackdown is a push to rid the country of the Rohingya for good.

Photos posted on social media after a diplomatic tour of the conflict zone in northern Rakhine state last week appear to back that up.

The haunting pictures, posted on the Twitter account of the European Union Ambassador to Myanmar Kristian Schmidt, show a scarred territory with

This handout aerial photograph taken on February 9, 2018 and received by Agence France-Presse on February 12 allegedly shows bulldozed villages in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state. large patches of levelled land.

Villages incinerate­d during the army crackdown now appear to have been completely bulldozed, devoid of all structures and even trees.

“The Rohingyas are shocked to see their villages razed,” said Chris Lewa, head of the NGO the Arakan Project, which has worked for years with Rohingya in Rakhine state.

They fear the upcoming rainy season will further wash away any signs of she added.

“The Rohingya have the feeling that they [the military] are doing away with the last traces of their presence in the region,” she said.

Myanmar and Bangladesh signed a repatriati­on agreement last year that was supposed to commence in January.

But many Rohingya refuse to return without the guarantee of basic rights and safety. their past lives,

Authoritie­s in Myanmar also insist they will heavily vet all returnees and only take back complex and controvers­ial process critics say is likely to exclude large numbers of people.

Myanmar’s Social Welfare Minister Win Myat Aye, the lead - cess, said the bulldozing was part of a plan to “build back” villages to a higher standard than before.

“We are trying to have the new village plan,” he said. “When they come back they can live in their place of origin or nearest to their place of origin.”

He said it is taking time because of a labor shortage sparked by the Rohingya exodus and that the government plans to pay returnees to help rebuild their own homes.

Accusation­s of a systematic campaign to rid Rakhine of Rohingya history are not new.

Last year the United Nations were underway to “effectivel­y erase signs of memorable landmarks in the geography of the Rohingya landscape and memory.”

Access to Rakhine remains tightly controlled, despite a snowballin­g number of allegation­s of massacres of Rohingya villagers in Rakhine.

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