The Borneo Post

Troops in Rakhine on high alert after killings of Rohingya

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NAYPYITAW: Troops in Myanmar’s northeaste­rn Rakhine state were put on high alert yesterday, police and sources said, after nearly 200 Rakhine Buddhist villagers fled the area after a recent spate of killings and amid fears of fresh attacks by Rohingya insurgents.

Rakhine Chief Minister Nyi Pu and senior state government officials have ‘ urgently’ gone to the area after receiving reports of fleeing villagers, officials said, and border guards in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh have also been put on alert.

Rohingya insurgents attacked Myanmar border guard posts in October, provoking a military crackdown in which hundreds were killed, more than 1,000 houses burned down and some 75,000 Rohingya Muslims forced to flee to Bangladesh.

The United Nations has establishe­d a fact-finding mission to investigat­e crimes against humanity allegedly committed by the military during the counteroff­ensive. The administra­tion of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has rejected the allegation­s and opposes the mission.

Fighting in Rakhine has been sporadic since the end of November, but tensions have risen over the past several weeks when village administra­tors were murdered and troops killed three people while clearing a Rohingya militant camp last week.

Myanmar’s state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper said on Tuesday a villager in northern Rakhine was ‘speared’ while praying at the weekend, following a separate attack on a village head by a group of ‘at least 10 masked assailants’ who stabbed the village leader to death on June 17.

“The killings took place over the weekend and the situation is getting increasing­ly worse. A group of people wearing black masks has killed local administra­tors close to the government, so the residents are panicking. That’s why we are on high alert,” Rakhine state police chief, Sein Lwin, told Reuters.

Sein Lwin and a military source operating in the area said security forces expected fresh Rohingya militant attacks on troops after Ramadan, the Muslim holy month, which ended in Myanmar on Monday.

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