The Arizona Republic

Rohingya kids in Myanmar face hard labor, difficult lives

- By Robin McDowell

MAUNGDAW, Myanmar — The 10year-old struggles up the hill, carrying buckets filled with rocks. Though he tries to keep a brave face in front of his friends, his eyes brim with tears. Every inch of his body aches, he says, and he feels sick and dizzy from the weight.

“I hate it,” whispers Anwar Sardad. He has to help support his family, but he wishes there was a way other than working for the government constructi­on agency.

He adds: “I wouldn’t have to live this life if I wasn’t a Muslim.”

The lives of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya children like Anwar are growing more hopeless in Myanmar, even as the predominan­tly Buddhist nation of 60 million wins praise for ending decades of dictatorsh­ip.

The Muslim ethnic group has long suffered from discrimina­tion that rights groups call among the worst in the world. But here in northern Rakhine state, home to 80 percent of the country’s 1 million Rohingya, it is more difficult now for children to get adequate education, food or medical care than it had been in the days of the junta. They have few options beyond hard labor, for a dollar a day.

The Associated Press’ visit to the area was a first for foreign reporters. Local officials responded with deep suspicion, bristling when Rohingya were interviewe­d. Police meetings were called, journalist­s were followed and people were intimidate­d after being interviewe­d, including children.

In a country torn by ethnic violence over the past 15 months, this is the one region where Muslim mobs killed Buddhists, rather than the other way around. And although only 10 of the 240 deaths occurred here, this is the only region where an entire population has been punished, through travel restrictio­ns and other exclusiona­ry policies.

Muslim schools known as madrassas have been shut down, leading to crowding in government schools, where Rohingya, who make up 90 percent of the population in this corner of the country, are taught by Buddhist teachers in a language many don’t understand.

In the village of Ba Gone Nar, where a monk was killed in last year’s violence, enrollment at a small public school has soared to 1,250. Kids ranging from preschoole­rs to eighth-graders are crammed so tightly on the floor it’s nearly impossible to walk between them.

“Our teachers write a lot of things on the blackboard, but don’t teach us how to read them,” says 8-year-old Anwar Sjak. “It’s very difficult to learn anything in this school.”

There are only 11 government-appointed teachers — one for every 114 students. On a day reporters visit, they fail to show up — a common occurrence.

Few kids have chairs or desks. Many are coughing. Others look up at newcomers with dazed stares.

“If I could be anything, I’d be doctor when I grow up,” Anwar says. “Because whenever someone in my family gets sick and we go to the hospital, the staff never takes care of us. I feel so bad about that.

“But I know that will never happen,” the third-grader adds. “The government wouldn’t allow it.”

 ?? GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E/AP ?? A Muslim child walks with a net and some fish in a bag Sept. 12 close to Myinn Hlut village in Maungdaw, Myanmar.
GEMUNU AMARASINGH­E/AP A Muslim child walks with a net and some fish in a bag Sept. 12 close to Myinn Hlut village in Maungdaw, Myanmar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States