The Star Malaysia

Home becomes prison

Rohingya Muslims on the inside looking out after sectarian strife

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SITTWE: Barbed wire and armed troops guard the Muslim quarter of a violence-wracked city in western Myanmar, a virtual prison for the families that have inhabited its narrow streets for generation­s.

The security forces outside the ghetto in the Rakhine state capital Sittwe are not there to stop its residents leaving – although few dare to anyway – but to protect them from Buddhist mobs after an outburst of sectarian hatred.

In the nearby city centre, life has regained some semblance of normality since the authoritie­s imposed a state of emergency in June in response to Buddhist-Muslim clashes that left dozens dead and tens of thousands homeless.

But inside the tense enclave of Aung Mingalar, hundreds of families from the Rohingya Muslim minority group say they are living in fear for their lives.

“Rakhines will attack us today,” one man said at Friday prayers last week.

The same evening, groups of Rakhine Buddhists – who have also accused the Rohingya of attacks on their communitie­s – gathered outside the barriers, prompting troops to fire warning shots and sparking panic inside.

On three separate days earlier in the week, hundreds of ethnic Rakhines – sometimes led by Buddhist monks – had marched near the perimeter demanding the “relocation” of Aung Mingalar.

Their shouts were clearly audible by people within the ghetto, who could only imagine what was happening outside.

“Inmy opinion, living in the Sahara desert in Africa would be better than living in this situation,” said 28year-old Mohamed Said, tears welling in his eyes.

Between 3,000 and 8,000 people are thought to live in an area of roughly 0.5sq km, where no traffic circulates and almost all shops have been shuttered.

Supplies of food – mainly rice – are provided by the authoritie­s and some benevolent Buddhist locals, forced to deliver aid discreetly for fear of fanning local resentment­s. But there is not enough to eat.

Some Rohingya have dared to breach the barriers – which vary from bamboo and barbed wire to simple security cordons – hiding their faces under hoods to prevent people identifyin­g them.

But most people have not ventured outside in four months.

“This bamboo fence is like a psychologi­cal barrier, symbolisin­g the fear that separates the two worlds,” said Chris Lewa, head of the Arakan Project, which campaigns for Rohingya rights.

Calls are growing for the Muslim quarter to be moved.

“If the Aung Mingalar quarter stays in the city centre, the problem will get worse,” said Nya Na, a leader of a monk associatio­n. “I don’t want the two communitie­s to fight. It is risky for them to stay.”

The stateless Rohingya have long been considered by the United Nations to be one of the most persecuted minorities on the planet.

Viewed as illegal immigrants from neighbouri­ng Bangladesh by the Myanmar government and many Burmese – who call them “Bengalis” – they face tight restrictio­ns on their movements and limited access to employment, education and public services.

More than 50,000 Muslims and up to 10,000 Buddhists are thought to be displaced across Rakhine state, where people from both communitie­s were forced to flee as mobs torched whole villages.

Segregatio­n, already imposed on many of the 800,000 Rohingya living in western Myanmar, has become widespread since the unrest, with many fearing the divide will become irreversib­le.

Muslims have been left particular­ly deprived, with thousands living in squalid camps on the edge of Sittwe, separated from the Buddhist population and with scant provisions.

The segregatio­n recalls South African apartheid in the 1980s, “but worse” because the Rohingya are unable to leave their camps, Lewa said.

“Freedom of movement was always an issue for the Rohingya, but it is an extreme restrictio­n now,” said Sarnata Reynolds, of aid group Refugees Internatio­nal.

“Unofficial­ly there seems to be widespread agreement that the camps will likely be there for three years or more, and that it might be the beginning of a permanent segregatio­n.”

The UN, which has been active in the region for decades, is more hopeful.

“We are informed by the government that it is for the purposes of bringing the unrest under control, that this is a temporary separation, not a segregatio­n,” said UN country chief Ashok Nigam.

But even if the camps are closed and the barbed wires are taken down, the fear is that the distrust will endure between communitie­s that once lived side-by-side as neighbours. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Nothing left: A Rohingya Muslim man standing next to the ruins of his burned house on the edge of the Aung Mingalar quarter, turned into a ghetto after violence wracked the city of Sittwe, capital of Myanmar’s western Rakhine state.
— AFP Nothing left: A Rohingya Muslim man standing next to the ruins of his burned house on the edge of the Aung Mingalar quarter, turned into a ghetto after violence wracked the city of Sittwe, capital of Myanmar’s western Rakhine state.
 ?? — AFP ?? Nowhere to go: A policeman sitting behind a barbed wire fence blocking the entrance into the Aung Mingalar quarter.
— AFP Nowhere to go: A policeman sitting behind a barbed wire fence blocking the entrance into the Aung Mingalar quarter.

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