Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rohingya stream into Bangladesh

U.N. counts 60,000 refugees fleeing Burma violence so far

- BERNAT ARMANGUE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ashok Sharma of The Associated Press.

SHAH PORIR DWIP, Bangladesh — Tens of thousands more people have crossed by boat and on foot into Bangladesh in the past couple of days as they flee violence in western Burma, the United Nations’ refugee agency said Saturday.

Burma’s security officials and insurgents from the Rohingya ethnic minority are accusing each other of burning down villages and committing atrocities in Burma’s Rakhine state. The military has said nearly 400 people, most of them insurgents, have died in armed clashes.

The violence has triggered a flood of refugees crossing mostly on foot into Bangladesh, though some were fleeing in wooden boats.

“Roughly 60,000 have arrived in Bangladesh since the violence erupted on Aug. 25,” said refugee agency spokesman Vivian Tan. That’s about 20,000 more than the number local officials had estimated Friday.

Refugees who had arrived at the Bangladesh­i fishing village of Shah Porir Dwip described bombs exploding and Rohingyas being burned alive.

“We fled to Bangladesh to save our lives,” said a man who only gave his first name, Karim. “The military and extremist Rakhine are burning us, burning us, killing us, setting our village on fire.”

He said he paid about $150 for each of his family members to be smuggled on a wooden boat to Bangladesh after soldiers killed 110 Rohingya in their village of Kunnapara, near the coastal town of Maungdaw.

“The military destroyed everything. After killing some Rohingya, the military burned their houses and shops,” he said. “We have a baby who is 8 days only, and an old woman who is 105.”

Satellite imagery analyzed by Human Rights Watch shows hundreds of buildings had been destroyed in at least 17 sites across Rakhine state since Aug. 25, including some 700 structures that appeared to have been burned down in just the village of Chein Khar Li, the internatio­nal rights watchdog said in a statement Saturday.

Ali Hossain, a deputy commission­er in Cox’s Bazar, said Bangladesh was struggling to cope as “the flow of Rohingya refugees is continuing by boat and the land route.”

The Red Cross has sent teams to refugee camps, in coordinati­on with the local Red Crescent Society, to “assess the refugees’ requiremen­ts. The influx is scattered at different places. The task is challengin­g for us,” said spokesman Misada Saif.

The violence broke out on Aug. 25, when insurgents attacked Burma police and paramilita­ry posts in what they said was an effort to protect minority Rohingya. In response, the military unleashed what it called “clearance operations” to root out the insurgents.

Advocates for the Rohingya, an oppressed Muslim minority in overwhelmi­ngly Buddhist Burma, say security forces and vigilantes have attacked and burned villages, shooting civilians and causing others to flee.

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