Daily Dispatch

Thousands flee Myanmar attacks

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DHAKA has called on Myanmar to take urgent measures to protect its Rohingya minority after thousands crossed into Bangladesh in just a few days, some saying the military was burning villages and raping young girls.

Troops have poured into a strip of land along Myanmar’s border with Bangladesh that is largely home to the stateless Muslim Rohingya minority since a series of coordinate­d and deadly attacks on police border posts last month.

Up to 30 000 Rohingya have been forced to flee their homes according to the United Nations, which is urging Bangladesh to open its border to them.

Bangladesh said thousands had already entered the country and thousands more were reported to be gathering at the border.

It said the foreign ministry had summoned the Myanmar ambassador late on Wednesday to express deep concern at the humanitari­an situation in western Rakhine state.

“Despite our border guards’ sincere effort to prevent the influx, thousands of distressed Myanmar citizens including women, children and elderly people continue to cross [the] border into Bangladesh,” it said.

“Thousands more have been reported to be gathering at the border crossing,” it said, calling for urgent appropriat­e measures so that Muslim minorities … are not forced to seek shelter across the border.

Many of those seeking refuge in Bangladesh say they have walked for days and used rickety boats to cross into the neighbouri­ng country, where hundreds of thousands of registered Rohingya refugees have been living for decades.

Since the latest violence flared up, Bangladesh’s secular government has been under intense pressure to open its border to prevent a humanitari­an disaster.

Instead, Bangladesh border guards have intensifie­d patrols and coast guards have deployed extra ships. Officials say they have stopped about 1 000 Rohingya at the border since Monday. Farmer Deen Mohammad was among the thousands who evaded the patrols, sneaking into the Bangladesh­i border town of Teknaf four days ago with his wife, two of their children and three other families.

“They [Myanmar’s military] took my two boys, aged nine and 12 when they entered my village. I don’t know what happened to them,” Mohammad, 50, said.

“They took women in rooms and then locked them from inside. Up to 50 women and girls of our village were tortured and raped.”

Mohammad said houses in his village were burned, echoing similar testimony from other recent arrivals.

The Myanmar military has denied burning villages, but Human Rights Watch said on Monday that by using satellite imagery it had identified 820 more structures destroyed in five Rohingya villages between November 10-18. — AFP

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? OUTRAGE: Indonesian activists hold protest banners reading 'Save Rohingya’ and 'Stop Genocide’ during a demonstrat­ion in front of the Myanmar Embassy in Jakarta yesterday
Picture: EPA OUTRAGE: Indonesian activists hold protest banners reading 'Save Rohingya’ and 'Stop Genocide’ during a demonstrat­ion in front of the Myanmar Embassy in Jakarta yesterday

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