Eating leaves to survive in Myanmar's
'ethnic cleansing' zone
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[September 27, 2017]
MAUNGDAW, Myanmar (Reuters) - Along
the main road that stretches nearly 40 kilometers north from Maungdaw
town in Myanmar's violence-riven Rakhine State, all but one of the
villages that were once home to tens of thousands of people have been
turned into smouldering ash.
Hundreds of cows roam through deserted settlements and charred paddy
fields. Hungry dogs eat small goats. The remains of local mosques,
markets and schools - once bustling with Rohingya Muslims - are silent.
Despite strict controls on access to northern Rakhine, Reuters
independently traveled to parts of the most-affected area in early
September, the first detailed look by reporters inside the region where
the United Nations says Myanmar's security forces have carried out
ethnic cleansing.
Nearly 500 people have been killed and 480,000 Rohingya have fled since
Aug. 25, when attacks on 30 police posts and a military base by Muslim
militants provoked a fierce army crackdown. The government has rejected
allegations of arson, rape and arbitrary killings leveled against its
security forces.
"We were scared that the army and the police would shoot us if they
found us ... so we ran away from the village," said Suyaid Islam, 32,
from Yae Khat Chaung Gwa Son, near the area visited by Reuters north of
Maungdaw. He was speaking by phone from a refugee camp in Bangladesh
after leaving his village soon after the attacks.
Residents of his village told Reuters it had been burned down by
security forces in an earlier operation against Rohingya insurgents late
last year. Those that did not flee have been surviving since in
makeshift shacks, eating food distributed by aid agencies.
Satellite photos showed that tens of thousands of homes in northern
Rakhine have been destroyed in 214 villages, New York-based Human Rights
Watch (HRW) said. The U.N. detected 20 sq km (8 sq miles) of destroyed
structures.
The government said more than 6,800 houses have been set on fire. It
blames the Rohingya villagers and the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army
(ARSA), which staged the Aug. 25 attacks.
"The information we obtained on this side is that terrorists did the
burnings," said Zaw Htay, spokesman for national leader Aung San Suu
Kyi.
Reuters reporters have made two trips to northern Rakhine, visiting the
townships of Maungdaw, Buthidaung and Rathedaung, and driving from
Maungdaw through the most affected area along the main road north to the
town of Kyein Chaung. (For a graphic of the area, click:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2y8FgQ8)
The reporters talked briefly to residents but, because many were scared
of being seen speaking to outsiders, most interviews were carried out by
phone from outside the army operation area.
FOOD RUNNING LOW
Little aid has made it to northern Rakhine since the U.N. had to suspend
operations because of the fighting and after the government suggested
its food was sustaining insurgents. Convoys organized by the Red Cross
have twice been stopped and searched by hostile ethnic Rakhines in the
state capital Sittwe.
In U Shey Kya, where last October Rohingya residents accused the Myanmar
army of raping several women, a teacher who spoke to Reuters from the
village by phone said only about 100 families out of 800 households have
stayed behind.
Those who remain are playing a cat-and-mouse game with the soldiers, who
come to the village in the morning prompting the residents to hide in
the forest and return at night.
"We don't even have food to eat for this evening. What can we do?" said
the teacher. "We are close to the forest where we have leaves we can eat
and find some water to survive." He refused to give his name because he
had been warned by the authorities not to talk to reporters.
The man said escaping through bush in monsoon rain with his elderly
parents, six children and pregnant wife was not an option.
Zaw Htay said the government has prioritized humanitarian assistance to
the area.
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A burnt house is seen in a village in Maungdaw in the north of
Rakhine state in Myanmar, September 12, 2017. REUTERS/Stringer/File
Photo
"If there are any locations where aid has not reached yet, people
should let us know, we will try to reach them as soon as we can," he
said.
About 30,000 non-Muslim residents of northern Rakhine have also been
displaced.
Before the latest exodus there were around 1.1 million Rohingya
Muslims in Myanmar, mostly living in Rakhine, where they are denied
citizenship and are regarded as interlopers from Bangladesh by the
Buddhist majority.
"HAPPY THEY'RE GONE NOW"
Rohingya who have fled to Bangladesh and human rights organizations
say ethnic Rakhine vigilantes have aided the military in driving out
the Muslim population.
Kamal Hussein, 22, from Alel Than Kyaw, south of Maungdaw town said
his village was destroyed in early September, after which he fled to
Bangladesh, where he spoke to Reuters.
Hussein said Rakhine mobs "poured petrol on the houses. Then, they
came out and the military fired a grenade launcher at a house to set
it alight".
Government spokesman Zaw Htay said some empty buildings in the area
had been burned by ethnic Rakhines. "We told the regional government
to take action on that," he said.
The damage caused by the fires, Reuters interviews and satellite
pictures show, is by far the largest in Maungdaw, where the bulk of
insurgent attacks took place. Across the mostly coastal area,
stretching more than 100 km (60 miles) through thick bush and
monsoon-swollen streams, most villages have been burned.
Maungdaw town itself, until recently ethnically mixed with Rakhine
Buddhists, Muslims and some Hindus, is now segregated, with the
remaining Rohingya shuttered in their homes. Some 450 houses in
Rohingya parts of the town were burned down in the first week after
the attacks, HRW said citing satellite photographs.
"Those who stored food, sold it and raised money to flee to
Bangladesh," Mohammad Salem, 35, who used to sell cosmetics at the
market, told Reuters by phone from the town.
In ethnically-mixed Rathedaung township, 16 out of 21 Rohingya
villages have been burned, according to residents and humanitarian
workers.
Of the remaining five, two villages in the south are now cut off
from food and threatened by hostile Rakhine neighbors.
In many places people have no access to medicines, residents said.
Reuters talked to two Rakhine Buddhist officials who corroborated
the scale of the damage.
Tin Tun Soe, a Rakhine administrator in Chein Khar Li, where a
security post had come under attack, said the army response was
rapid and all the Rohingya had been driven out. Nearly 1,600 houses
were burned down a day after the attacks, he said, though he blamed
the fires on the insurgents.
"They have so many people. If they are here, we're afraid to live,"
said Tin Tun Soe. "I am very happy that now all of them are gone."
(Reporting by Wa Lone and Shoon Naing in Yangon; Additional
reporting by Simon Lewis in Cox's Bazar; Writing by Antoni
Slodkowski; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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