The Telegram (St. John's)

Ongoing Myanmar clashes leave 96 dead

Six civilians among casualties

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Myanmar’s government and advocates for the country’s Muslim Rohingya ethnic minority traded charges Sunday of killing civilians, burning down buildings and planting land mines, as clashes that began last week when insurgents launched attacks against police posts continued.

An announceme­nt posted online by the office of the country’s leader, State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, said the death toll from the violence that started Thursday night had reached 96, mostly alleged Rohingya attackers but also 12 security personnel.

The announceme­nt was the first by the government to list civilians among the dead — six people identified as Hindu said to have been killed by the insurgents.

Myanmar is overwhelmi­ngly Buddhist, but about one million Muslim Rohingya live in the northern part of Rakhine, the western state where the violence is taking place.

Advocates for the Rohingya suggest many more civilians have died in army attacks on villages, but they have not given a total. They also say the attacks have caused villagers to flee to the mountains for shelter or to try to cross the border into Bangladesh.

Senior Rakhine state officials who visited the troubled area said Sunday evening that government forces were trying to restore peace.

“We are trying our best to bring stability and now we can see the areas are stabilizin­g,” said Nyi Pu, the state’s chief minister. “But anything can happen at any time, so I can’t say what will happen.”

Win Myat Aye, union minister of social welfare, relief and resettleme­nt, said: “We are now focusing strongly on the security matters to make the area more secure. And we are also we are increasing our military strength.”

The two men spoke to reporters in the state capital, Sittwe, in the southern part of the state, far from the fighting. They also said the government was trying to protect members of internatio­nal aid organizati­ons in the area, or evacuate them if they desired. The government has allowed only a limited number of foreign aid organizati­ons to work in northern Rakhine state, and due to long-standing communal tensions, some Buddhists resent their helping Rohingya.

Witnesses and refugees on the Bangladesh border said Sunday that the situation there was tense, with thousands of Rohingya trying to flee Myanmar but unable to leave. Witnesses said they heard the sound of gunshots. Bangladesh­i villagers said they could see military helicopter­s hovering in the Myanmar sky.

Several hundred Rohingya got stuck in a “no man’s land” at one border point in Bangladesh’s Bandarban district, barred from moving farther by Bangladesh­i border guards. Lt. Col. Manzurul Hasan Khan of Border Guards Bangladesh said they cordoned off about 1,000 Rohingya after they attempted to enter Bangladesh.

Still, more than 2,000 Rohingya entered Bangladesh overnight through two points at Teknaf in Cox’s Bazar district, said Jalal Ahmed, a local government official at the Kharangakh­ali border point.

A Rohingya insurgent group, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, or ARSA, took responsibi­lity for Thursday night’s attacks on more than 25 locations, saying they were in defence of Rohingya communitie­s that had been brutalized by government forces.

Suu Kyi’s office accused the insurgents of “torching police outposts and monasterie­s, killing innocent people and planting mines.”

ARSA, meanwhile, accused the army of using civilians as human shields.

Clashes were continuing on Sunday, with witnesses contacted by phone in the northern Rakhine town of Maungdaw saying they could hear gunshots.

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