Bangkok Post

Food aid halted as state sinks deeper into violence

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>> YANGON: The World Food Programme (WFP) has suspended food aid in Myanmar’s violence-scorched Rakhine state, as the humanitari­an situation deteriorat­es with a surging death toll and tens of thousands — both Rohingya Muslims and ethnic Buddhists — on the move.

Relief agencies, including WFP, have repeatedly been accused by Myanmar authoritie­s of allowing their rations to fall into the hands of Rohingya militants, whose attacks on police posts on Aug 25 sparked the current violence.

Around 120,000 people — most of them Rohingya civilians — have relied on aid handouts in camps since 2012, when religious riots killed scores and sparked a crisis which is again burning through the state.

Over the past five years Rakhine has been cut along ethnic and religious lines, but the current violence is the worst yet.

Aid agencies are routinely accused of a pro-Rohingya bias and the sudden flareup of unrest has renewed safety concerns, prompting relief work to be pulled back.

“All WFP food assistance operations in Rakhine state have been suspended due to insecurity ... affecting 250,000 internally displaced and other most vulnerable population­s,” the WFP said in statement.

“We are coordinati­ng with the authoritie­s to resume distributi­ons for all affected communitie­s as soon as possible, including for any people newly affected by the current unrest.”

The Rohingya, branded illegal immigrants in Myanmar and mostly denied citizenshi­p, make up the vast majority of the dead and displaced since 2012.

In the ongoing bout of violence, 40,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh, according to the UN.

Tens of thousands have been turned away by border officials, while scores have died trying to cross the Naf river —a natural frontier between the two countries.

On Friday, Myanmar’s army chief said nearly 400 people have died in the violence, among them 370 Rohingya militants, and 11,000 ethnic Rakhine Buddhists, Hindus and other minority groups have also been internally displaced.

The worst-hit areas are off-limits to reporters. But unverifiab­le testimony has trickled out, telling of tit-for-tat mass killings and villages being torched by the army and the militants, who are fighting under the banner of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army and say they are defending against persecutio­n.

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