Arab News

Rohingya women abandoned after rapes

‘My husband blamed me,’ says rape victim

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KYAR GAUNG TAUNG, Myanmar: Rohingya Muslim Ayamar Bagon has lived on handouts since her husband left her after she told him she was gang-raped by Myanmar soldiers in the final month of her pregnancy.

She is among scores of women who accuse security forces of sexual abuses during a months-long military ‘clearance operation’ so brutal the UN fears it may amount to crimes against humanity.

AFP visited the remote region in the north of Rakhine State on a government-run trip this month, the first time foreign media have been officially allowed into the area since the military began hunting militants in October.

On the edge of Kyar Gaung Taung village, away from the government minders, a group of Rohingya women described how their lives were shattered the day soldiers came to their homes late last year.

“I was raped close to my due date, in my ninth month of pregnancy. They knew I was pregnant but didn’t care,” Ayamar Bagon told AFP through a UN translator, clutching her baby daughter to her chest.

“My husband blamed me for letting it happen. Because of this, he married another woman and now lives in another village,” the 20-year-old added, explaining that she survives on food donations from her neighbors.

Mother-of-two Hasinnar Baygon, 20, said her husband has also threatened to leave after she was raped by three troops in December.

They took turns to violate her while two others stood watch outside her hut, she alleges, adding that she knew they were soldiers because of their uniforms and guns.

All the Rohingya men had already fled the village out of fear they would be beaten up by troops, leaving only the women, children and elderly behind.

“My husband told me he is going to leave me. He blamed me for not running away,” Baygon said.

The government denies the allegation­s and AFP has not been able to verify their stories or claims from two other women who said they were raped by soldiers.

But they echo scores of accounts collected by UN investigat­ors and rights groups from some of the 74,000 Rohingya who have fled to neighborin­g Bangladesh.

The UN believes hundreds may have died in what could be the bloodiest chapter of Buddhistma­jority Myanmar’s years-long persecutio­n of the 1.2 million Rohingya Muslims who live in Rakhine.

Kyar Gaung Taung village was caught up in one of the most brutal episodes in November, when witnesses and state media said dozens of Rohingya were killed as troops swept through the villages.

Myanmar’s government has denied almost all claims of abuses and barred a UN fact-finding mission from the area.

Instead they say probes by the military and police, as well as a state-appointed team, are sufficient.

“Cases have been filed regarding killings after the investigat­ion. They also looked into allegation­s of rape,” said Brig. Gen. San Lwin, the head of the border guard police in Rakhine state, adding the investigat­ions were ongoing.

Rohingya from Kyar Gaung Taung said they had lodged three rape cases out of 15 alleged assaults in the village, but nothing has been done.

Other women were too scared to report what happened to them, fearing retributio­n from authoritie­s or being ostracized by their community and husbands.

 ??  ?? Ayamar Bagon, 20, left, and Hasamithay­a 18, who claim to be raped by soldiers in December last year, holding their children in Kyar Gaung Taung village in Maungdaw, Myanmar. (AFP)
Ayamar Bagon, 20, left, and Hasamithay­a 18, who claim to be raped by soldiers in December last year, holding their children in Kyar Gaung Taung village in Maungdaw, Myanmar. (AFP)

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