Gulf News

UN calls for probe into Myanmar military crackdown in Rakhine

Aid agencies estimate more than 15,000 people have been displaced

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The United Nations has called for a probe into allegation­s that Myanmar troops have killed civilians and torched villages in northern Rakhine state, as fresh reports emerged of forced evictions in a security crackdown.

Aid agencies estimate more than 15,000 people have been displaced since the military took control of an area close to the Bangladesh border two weeks ago, a region which is home to the stateless Rohingya minority. Myanmar’s government says hundreds of Rohingya fighters led by a Talibantra­ined militant were behind deadly raids on several police posts on October 9 that sparked a major security response.

Aid deliveries stopped

Since then the military has stopped aid deliveries to tens of thousands of people in northern Rakhine and blocked access to rights groups and journalist­s.

Most of the people in the locked-down area are Rohingya — a Muslim minority reviled by many in Myanmar as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

The UN urged Myanmar’s government “to undertake proper and thorough investigat­ions of alleged violations”.

“Reports of homes and mosques being burnt down and persons of a certain profile being rounded up and shot are alarming and unacceptab­le,” said the UN Special Rapporteur on summary executions Agnes Callamard.

“The authoritie­s cannot justify simply shooting suspects down on the basis of the seriousnes­s of the crime alone,” she said, referring to the assaults on border guards that sparked the clampdown.

While details of military abuses are hard to verify, the UN said it has received “repeated allegation­s” of arbitrary arrests and extrajudic­ial killings “within the context of the security operations”.

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