Texarkana Gazette

U.N.: Attacks strategic effort to expel Muslim group

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GENEVA—A report by the U.N. human rights office says attacks against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar point to a strategy to instill “widespread fear and trauma” and prevent them from ever returning to their homes.

The report released Wednesday is based on 65 interviews conducted in mid-September with Rohingya, individual­ly and in groups, as more the half a million people from the ethnic group fled into Bangladesh during a violent crackdown in Myanmar.

The attacks against Rohingya in Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state by security forces and Buddhist mobs were “coordinate­d and systematic,” with the intent of not only driving the population out of Myanmar but preventing them from returning, the report said.

Some of those interviewe­d said that before and during attacks, megaphones were used to announce: “You do not belong here—go to Bangladesh. If you do not leave, we will torch your houses and kill you.”

According to the U.N. researcher­s, measures against the minority group began almost a month before the Aug. 25 attacks on police posts by Muslim militants that served as a pretext for what Myanmar’s military called “clearance operations” in Rakhine.

“Informatio­n we have received indicates that days and up to a month before the 25th of August, that the Myanmar security forces imposed further restrictio­ns on access to markets, medical clinics, schools and religious sites,” Karin Friedrich, who was part of the U.N. mission to Bangladesh, said at a news conference. “Rohingya men aged 15 to 40 were reportedly arrested by the Myanmar police” and detained without any charges, she said.

U.N. human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said the Myanmar government’s denial of rights, including citizenshi­p, to the Rohingya appeared to be part of “a cynical ploy to

forcibly transfer large numbers of people without possibilit­y of return.” He has also described the systematic attacks and widespread burning of villages as “textbook ethnic cleansing.”

The report said efforts were made to “effectivel­y erase signs of memorable landmarks” in Rohingya areas to make the landscape unrecogniz­able.

Myanmar’s Buddhist majority denies that Rohingya Muslims are a separate ethnic group and regards them as illegal immigrants.

 ?? AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasingh­e ?? Two-year-old Noyem Fatima offers a piece of banana to her elder brother, Yosar Hossein, 7, Oct. 2 as they sit on a sidewalk with their belongings in Leda, Bangladesh. Hossein carried Noyem for seven days as they fled from their village in Myanmar to a...
AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasingh­e Two-year-old Noyem Fatima offers a piece of banana to her elder brother, Yosar Hossein, 7, Oct. 2 as they sit on a sidewalk with their belongings in Leda, Bangladesh. Hossein carried Noyem for seven days as they fled from their village in Myanmar to a...

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