Cape Argus

Evacuation­s follow Myanmar violence

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YANGON/COX’S BAZAR: Myanmar’s government said it had evacuated at least 4 000 non-Muslim villagers amid clashes in north-western Rakhine state.

This came as thousands more Rohingya Muslims sought to flee across the border to Bangladesh yesterday.

The death toll from the violence that erupted on Friday with co-ordinated attacks by Rohingya insurgents has climbed to 98, including 80 insurgents and 12 members of the security forces, the government said.

Bracing for more violence, thousands of Rohingya – mostly women and children – were trying to forge the Naf River separating Myanmar and Bangladesh and the land border.

Reporters at the border could hear gunfire from the Myanmar side yesterday, which triggered a rush of Rohingya towards the no man’s land between the countries.

About 2 000 people have been able to cross into Bangladesh since Friday.

The violence marked a dramatic escalation of a conflict that has simmered since last October, when a similar but much smaller Rohingya attack prompted a brutal military operation with allegation­s of serious human rights abuses.

Experts said the latest attacks were so widespread they appeared to be more of an uprising than an insurgent offensive.

One army source said the military was also struggling to differenti­ate.

“All the villagers become insurgents; what they’re doing is like a revolution,” said the source in Rakhine.

“They don’t care if they die or not.”

The treatment of 1.1 million Muslim Rohingya in mainly Buddhist Myanmar has emerged as the biggest challenge for national leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Suu Kyi has condemned the raids in which insurgents wielding guns, sticks and home-made bombs assaulted 30 police stations and an army base.

The Nobel Peace Prize laureate has been accused by some Western critics of not speaking out for the long-persecuted Muslim minority.

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