The Post

Five Rohingya mass graves located

-

MYANMAR: The existence of five new Rohingya mass graves was revealed yesterday as further evidence of the systematic slaughter of the persecuted Muslim minority in Myanmar’s western Rakhine state since last August.

The reports, verified by the Associated Press through multiple witnesses from Gu Dar Pyin village and by time stamps on phone footage of corpses, attribute new atrocities to a military crackdown that now appears to have involved crimes against humanity.

Yanghee Lee, the United Nations special envoy on human rights in predominan­tly Buddhist Myanmar, said that the military’s operations against the Rohingya bore ‘‘the hallmarks of a genocide’’.

She said she could not make a definitive declaratio­n about genocide until a credible internatio­nal tribunal or court had weighed the evidence, but ‘‘we are seeing signs and it is building up to that’’.

The fresh evidence strengthen­s fears that the planned repatriati­on of some 750,000 refugees, sheltering in squalid conditions in neighbouri­ng Bangladesh, is ‘‘premature’’ and cannot guarantee their rights or safety.

Bangladesh and Myanmar had pledged to repatriate the refugees within two years, but the start date last week was delayed for logistical reasons.

Myanmar is racing to construct reception camps for the returnees, but the first pictures to emerge of plywood homes surrounded by barbed wire and guarded by soldiers have reinforced claims by rights groups that the Rohingya will be forced into grim ghettos.

The plans sparked demonstrat­ions among refugees, whose leaders want a say in their own future, and that their rights and citizenshi­p are guaranteed.

The UN Refugee Agency, which is not party to the bilateral repatriati­on talks, warned that any return should be based on informed and voluntary choice.

Even the bleak misery of Bangladesh’s Kutupalong, now the most densely populated refugee camp in the world, is not proving to be an incentive to push fearful refugees back home.

Refugees interviewe­d last week said they had been too traumatise­d by the military’s violence to go back.

‘‘My house was burnt down, properties were lost, my ninemonth-old daughter, Nur Kalima, was burnt alive by the military,’’ said Gul Bahar, 35, from Udong in Rakhine’s Maungdauw district.

She said her 70-year-old mother had drowned during the desperate escape into Bangladesh across the Naf river.

Mariam Khatun, 25, from Buthidaung township, said she would prefer to eke out a living in the ramshackle huts sprawling across the dusty wasteland of the camp, where food supplies are scarce and privacy non-existent.

‘‘My brother Feruz Ahmed was burnt alive in our home. There is nothing left. I witnessed killing, burning and the rape of beautiful women,’’ she said.

The United States State Department says the world needs to know what happened in the area of Myanmar where the mass graves were found.

State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert says Washington is ‘‘deeply, deeply troubled’’ by the report and continues to stand by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s recent statement that ethnic cleansing has occurred in Rakhine state.

Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch said the revelation­s of mass graves in Gu Dar Pyin ‘‘raised the stakes’’ for the internatio­nal community to act.

The Myanmar government regularly claims massacres like Gu Dar Pyin never happened, and has acknowledg­ed only one mass grave containing 10 ‘‘terrorists’’ in the village of Inn Din.

– Telegraph Group, AP

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Yanghee Lee, United Nations special envoy on human rights in Myanmar, told a press conference that the Myanmar military’s violent operations against Rohingya Muslims bear ‘‘the hallmarks of a genocide’’.
PHOTO: AP Yanghee Lee, United Nations special envoy on human rights in Myanmar, told a press conference that the Myanmar military’s violent operations against Rohingya Muslims bear ‘‘the hallmarks of a genocide’’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand