Albuquerque Journal

Myanmar attacks leave 59 rebels dead

Military, police respond to killings by Rohingya militants

- BY ESTHER HTUSAN

YANGON, Myanmar — Ethnic Rohingya militants in western Myanmar launched overnight attacks on more than two dozen police and border outposts, leaving 12 security personnel and 59 Rohingya dead in a dramatic escalation of fighting in the troubled region.

The office of the country’s leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, said military and border police responded to the attacks by launching “clearance operations.”

Police fought off groups of as many as 100 Rohingya attackers armed with guns, machetes and homemade grenades. The captured weapons were shown in photos posted online by the government.

A witness in Maungdaw township in Rakhine state, contacted by phone, said soldiers entered her village at about 10 a.m. Friday, burned homes and property, and shot dead at least 10 people.

The witness, who asked to be identified by her nickname, Emmar, because of fear of retributio­n, said villagers fled in many directions but mostly to a nearby mountain range. She said gunshots and explosions could be heard and smoke could still be seen Friday evening.

A militant group, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, or ARSA, took responsibi­lity for the overnight attacks on more than 25 locations, saying they were in defense of Rohingya communitie­s that had been brutalized by government forces. It issued its statement on Twitter on an account deemed legitimate by advocates of Rohingya rights.

Suu Kyi called the attacks “a calculated attempt to undermine the efforts of those seeking to build peace and harmony in Rakhine state.”

The clashes were deadlier than an attack by the militants on three border posts last October that killed nine policemen and set off months of brutal counterins­urgency operations by Myanmar security forces against Rohingya communitie­s in Rakhine state. Human rights groups accused the army of carrying out massive human rights abuses including killing, rape and burning down more than 1,000 homes and other buildings.

The army’s abuses fueled further resentment toward the government among the Muslim Rohingya, most of whom are considered by Myanmar’s Buddhist majority to be illegal immigrants from neighborin­g Bangladesh and are denied citizenshi­p and its rights. ARSA took advantage of the resentment by stepping up recruitmen­t of members.

The Rohingya have long faced severe discrimina­tion and were the targets of violence in 2012 that killed hundreds and drove about 140,000 people — predominan­tly Rohingya — from their homes to camps for the internally displaced, where most remain.

According to the United Nations, more than 80,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh since last October’s clashes.

Thursday night’s attacks began a few hours after a Rakhine Advisory Commission led by former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan released its final report and recommende­d that the government act quickly to improve economic developmen­t and social justice.

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