Cape Argus

‘The blood flowed in the streets’

Rohingya refugees tell of horror of military retributio­n

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THE SOLDIERS arrived in the Myanmar village just after 8am, the surviving villagers of Maung Nu hamlet said. They fired shots in the air, and then, the villagers claim, turned their guns on fleeing residents, who fell dead and wounded in the rice paddies. The military’s retributio­n for a Rohingya militant attack on police posts earlier that day had begun.

Mohammed Roshid, a rice farmer, heard the gunfire and fled with his wife and children, but his 80-year-old father, who walks with a stick, wasn’t as nimble. Roshid said he saw a soldier grab Yusuf Ali and slit his throat with such ferocity the old man was nearly decapitate­d.

“I wanted to go back and save him, but some relatives stopped me because there was so many soldiers,” Roshid, 55, said. “It’s the saddest thing in my life that I could not do anything for my father.”

The Myanmar military’s “clearance operation” in the Maung Nu hamlet and dozens of other villages populated by the country’s ethnic Rohingya minority triggered an exodus of an estimated 400 000 refugees into Bangladesh, an episode the UN human rights chief has called “ethnic cleansing”.

The tide of refugees is expected to swell in the coming days. The newly arrived refugees – dazed, clutching their belongings, some barefoot in ankle-deep mud – have overflowed an existing camp and put up makeshift shelters. Others sit on the roadways, fighting crowds as workers on large relief trucks fling down bags of rice or bottles of water.

Rights groups say it will take months, or years, to fully chronicle the devastatio­n in the country formerly known as Burma. Satellite photos show widespread burning, witnesses recount soldiers killing civilians, and the government itself said 176 Rohingya villages stand empty. No total death toll is yet available because the area remains sealed by the military.

“I can’t count how many,” said Soe Win, a Grade 10 teacher. “We were all watching what the military did. They slaughtere­d them one by one. And the blood flowed in the streets.”

The latest wave of violence began on August 25, when Rohingya militant group – the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army – attacked 30 police posts and an army base in Rakhine state, killing 12.

The subsequent military crackdown has prompted massive refugee exodus from Buddhist-majority Myanmar where Rohingya have long faced denial of citizenshi­p and other rights. – Washington Post

 ?? PICTURE: ISMAIL FERDOUS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? SURVIVORS: Saiful Rahman, 30, left, walks toward the mainland with his family after crossing the Naf River from Myanmar into Bangladesh.
PICTURE: ISMAIL FERDOUS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST SURVIVORS: Saiful Rahman, 30, left, walks toward the mainland with his family after crossing the Naf River from Myanmar into Bangladesh.

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