Toronto Star

UN says 270,000 Rohingya have fled violence in Burma

Members of Muslim minority seeking refuge in Bangladesh could overwhelm camps

- MUNEEZA NAQVI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COX’S BAZAR, BANGLADESH— The UN said Friday that an “alarming number” of 270,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled violence in Burma by crossing into Bangladesh in the last two weeks.

The new figure confirmed Friday by UN Refugee Agency spokespers­on Vivian Tan is much higher than the 164,000 the agency had previously estimated had arrived since Aug. 25.

“This is an alarming number,” Tan said. “The existing camps are full to the capacity. There is a lot of pressure on relief agencies to accommodat­e the rising numbers.”

She said the new number was still a “rough estimate,” and based on an assessment that involved a host of aid agencies operating in the area. Some aid groups also had identified “new pockets of people that we did not know about before, mainly in villages” where Bangladesh­i communitie­s had taken them in, but also some new settlement­s and clusters in difficult-to-access areas.

Makeshift camps were quickly appearing and expanding along roadsides, Tan said.

She said it was possible some peo- ple who received help from multiple agencies could have been counted twice.

The exodus from the northern state of Rakhine in Burma, also known as Myanmar, began Aug. 25 after Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts. The military responded with what it called “clearance operations” to root out any fighters it said might be hiding in villages of Rakhine state. The Burmese government says nearly 400 people have been killed in fighting it blames on insurgents, though Rohingya say they Burmese troops and Buddhist mobs attacked them and destroyed their villages.

It’s not known how many Rohingya remain in Rakhine state. Previously the population had been thought to be roughly 1 million.

Journalist­s in northern Rakhine state saw active fires in areas Rohingya had abandoned, adding to doubts over government claims that Rohingya themselves were responsibl­e for setting them.

Associated Press reporters who have been in Rohingya camps all week saw a surge in the number of people entering Bangladesh on Thursday and Friday.

An increasing number of Rohingya were also arriving by boat, with 300 boats reaching the Bangladesh town of Cox’s Bazar from Burma on Wednesday, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

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