The National - News

NEARLY 50,000 ROHINGYA FLEE MYANMAR FOR BANGLADESH IN PAST WEEK AS CRISIS GROWS

▶ UK ambassador to the UN urges Aung San Suu Kyi to ‘set the right tone.’ Fiona McGregor reports from Yangon

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An estimated 47,500 of Myanmar’s one million Rohingya have fled towards Bangladesh in the past week, the United Nations said yesterday, as Britain’s ambassador to the UN urged Aung San Suu Kyi to “set the right tone” to de-escalate tensions and the EU raised the spectre of inter-communal violence.

Latest UN figures showed that 27,500 Rohingya had made it across the border since Friday last week, an increase of almost 10,000 on Wednesday’s figures. Another 20,000 were estimated to be stuck in no man’s land between the two countries, as fighting between Myanmar security forces and the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (Arsa) militant group continued.

Others lost their lives attempting to escape. Bangladesh coastguard­s yesterday found the bodies of 17 Rohingya, many of them children, who drowned when their boats capsized in choppy waters crossing from Myanmar.

While the conflict is worse in the north of the state, fears were growing for those in other areas as the European Union reported that “increasing intimidati­on of aid workers” over recent weeks was hampering the delivery of support in central Rakhine and putting lives at risk.

It also highlighte­d increasing hate speech on social media.

“The biggest risk is that violence becomes inter-communal and spreads,” the EU’s European civil protection and humanitari­an operation said in a report on Wednesday.

The scale of the current migration – which began after the Arsa fighters launched deadly attacks on security posts in the early hours of August 25 – is far greater than the one that followed similar attacks last October. Myanmar’s security forces responded to those attacks with brutal clearance operations that the UN later said probably amounted to crimes against humanity and possible ethnic cleansing.

Between last October’s attacks by Arsa and those on Friday last week, about 87,000 of the mainly stateless Muslim minority crossed into Bangladesh.

The latest attacks by Arsa – deemed a terrorist organisati­on by the Myanmar government – came just hours after an advisory commission led by former UN secretary general Kofi Annan had announced its recommenda­tions on how to help to solve long-running tensions in Rakhine. The attacks

The latest UN figures show that 27,500 Rohingya have made it across the border since Friday last week

were widely condemned by internatio­nal government­s and agencies who predicted they would spark a repeat of last year’s clearance operations and civilian casualties.

And as the conflict continues, reports suggest increasing numbers of non-Rohingya civilians are falling victim to killings and arson attacks carried out by Arsa. As with reports involving attacks against the Rohinyga community, however, this informatio­n is very hard to verify because the affected area is in virtual lockdown.

Britain raised concerns about the crisis yesterday at a closed-doors meeting of the UN Security Council. Afterwards, UK ambassador to the UN Matthew Rycroft said there were still many “hugely supportive” allies of state counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, who is the de facto leader of Myanmar’s civilian-led government. The long-time pro-democracy campaigner and Nobel peace laureate has faced condemnati­on from some internatio­nal quarters for failing to speak out against abuses and the ongoing oppression of the Rohingya.

But Mr Rycroft said: “We look to her to set the right tone and to find the compromise­s and the de-escalation necessary in order to resolve the conflict for the good of all the people in Burma.”

So far, barring an initial statement condemning the Arsa attacks on the day they occurred, Ms Suu Kyi has made no official comments on the ongoing violence.

Despite removing her state counsellor title from its Facebook page, Ms Suu Kyi’s informatio­n committee continues to post graphic images of non-Muslim civilian casualties and statements linking internatio­nal aid organisati­ons to Arsa.

Yesterday, the UN ambassador to Myanmar, Scot Marciel, described as absurd claims that aid agencies related to the US government were supporting terrorism. His comments came after the government released more pictures of World Food Programme food packets they said had been found in Arsa camps.

The WFP said it takes food diversions very seriously and has asked the government to provide further informatio­n to help it trace where the parcels were originally sent. Additional informatio­n is yet to be provided.

A spokesman for the Myanmar government could not be contacted for a response.

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