Gulf Today

Murders leave Rohingya camps aghast

A spate of killings is fuelling unease in the Rohingya camps, where overstretc­hed police are struggling to protect nearly a million traumatise­d refugees from violent gangs

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COX’S BAZAR: A spate of bloody killings is fueling unease in the Rohingya camps on the Bangladesh-myanmar border, where overstretc­hed police are struggling to protect nearly a million traumatise­d refugees from violent gangs.

Just 1,000 police oficers guard the labyrinthi­ne shanties that make up the giant camps and authoritie­s want to more than double the force in the wake of the murders.

Three respected community leaders are among those slain in what police suspect is a power struggle between Rohingya gangs in the refugee slums in camps around Cox’s Bazar.

One, Arifullah, was stabbed 25 times on a busy road in June and left in a pool of blood. The other two were killed in their shacks just days apart by masked assailants.

Police in the crime-ridden Cox’s Bazar district are investigat­ing 21 refugee murders, many in recent months, which they blame on score-settling and turf wars. Many in Kutupalong, the world’s biggest refugee camp, and others nearby, say the unchecked violence leaves Rohingya families at the mercy of criminals.

“When the gangs come into the camps, people call the police. But they only arrive after the criminals are gone,” said 16-year-old Runa Akter, whose father disappeare­d in July with a relative who was later found dead.

Police only iled a case after her uncle’s body was found, she said.

“We are scared. We are especially worried about my brother, because there have been threats to kidnap and kill him,” the anxious teenager told AFP. “I don’t want to lose anyone else in my family.” A police investigat­or, SM Atiq Ullah, said no suspects had been identiied so far.

Criminals have long preyed on the Rohingya camps however.

Police say refugees with ties to Bangladesh­i drug and human traficking networks have sold Rohingya girls into sex and recruited mules to courier methamphet­amine.

The scourge has intensiied since an army crackdown in Buddhist-dominated Myanmar drove nearly 700,000 of the stateless Muslim minority into Bangladesh last year.

Hundreds of Rohingya refugees have been arrested since the August inlux for rape, drug offences, human traficking and weapons possession, among other crimes.

Afruzul Haque Tutul, a senior police oficer who until mid-august was deputy chief of Cox’s Bazar, said gangs cashing in on the human misery were extorting “huge money” from new refugees desperate for land, shelter and food.

Internal feuds over territory quickly turn deadly.

Among the bodies was Arifullah, one of the “mahjis” or community leaders tasked with overseeing day-to-day camp affairs.

As an English speaker, he met with dignitarie­s and liaised closely with police — a position of power Tutul says could have irked rivals.

Arifullah’s wife blamed Rohingya militants for the death of her husband who was surrounded and stabbed by a group of men.

She told AFP that Arifullah was a “big critic” of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), the shadowy group whose attacks in Myanmar sparked the military reprisals.

Bangladesh denies the militants have a foothold in the camps and the group distanced itself from crime in a rare January statement issued after two mahjis were murdered.

“It is very challengin­g, and sometimes threatenin­g, being a mahji,” said Arifullah’s right-hand man, Abdur Rahim, who took over four days after his friend’s killing.

 ?? File / Agence France-presse ?? This photo taken on July 18 shows Bangladesh­i police patrolling a Rohingya refugee camp in Teknaf.
File / Agence France-presse This photo taken on July 18 shows Bangladesh­i police patrolling a Rohingya refugee camp in Teknaf.

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