The Rohingya lists: refugees compile
their own record of those killed in Myanmar
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[August 17, 2018]
By Clare Baldwin
KUTUPALONG REFUGEE CAMP, Bangladesh
(Reuters) - Mohib Bullah is not your typical human rights investigator.
He chews betel and he lives in a rickety hut made of plastic and bamboo.
Sometimes, he can be found standing in a line for rations at the
Rohingya refugee camp where he lives in Bangladesh.
Yet Mohib Bullah is among a group of refugees who have achieved
something that aid groups, foreign governments and journalists have not.
They have painstakingly pieced together, name-by-name, the only record
of Rohingya Muslims who were allegedly killed in a brutal crackdown by
Myanmar's military.
The bloody assault in the western state of Rakhine drove more than
700,000 of the minority Rohingya people across the border into
Bangladesh, and left thousands of dead behind.
Aid agency Médecins Sans Frontières, working in Cox's Bazar at the
southern tip of Bangladesh, estimated in the first month of violence,
beginning at the end of August 2017, that at least 6,700 Rohingya were
killed. But the survey, in what is now the largest refugee camp in the
world, was limited to the one month and didn't identify individuals.
The Rohingya list makers pressed on and their final tally put the number
killed at more than 10,000. Their lists, which include the toll from a
previous bout of violence in October 2016, catalog victims by name, age,
father's name, address in Myanmar, and how they were killed.
"When I became a refugee I felt I had to do something," says Mohib
Bullah, 43, who believes that the lists will be historical evidence of
atrocities that could otherwise be forgotten.
Myanmar government officials did not answer phone calls seeking comment
on the Rohingya lists. Late last year, Myanmar's military said that 13
members of the security forces had been killed. It also said it
recovered the bodies of 376 Rohingya militants between Aug. 25 and Sept.
5, which is the day the army says its offensive against the militants
officially ended.
Rohingya regard themselves as native to Rakhine State. But a 1982 law
restricts citizenship for the Rohingya and other minorities not
considered members of one of Myanmar's "national races". Rohingya were
excluded from Myanmar's last nationwide census in 2014, and many have
had their identity documents stripped from them or nullified, blocking
them from voting in the landmark 2015 elections. The government refuses
even to use the word "Rohingya," instead calling them "Bengali" or
"Muslim."
Now in Bangladesh and able to organize without being closely monitored
by Myanmar's security forces, the Rohingya have armed themselves with
lists of the dead and pictures and video of atrocities recorded on their
mobile phones, in a struggle against attempts to erase their history in
Myanmar.
The Rohingya accuse the Myanmar army of rapes and killings across
northern Rakhine, where scores of villages were burnt to the ground and
bulldozed after attacks on security forces by Rohingya insurgents. The
United Nations has said Myanmar's military may have committed genocide.
Myanmar says what it calls a "clearance operation" in the state was a
legitimate response to terrorist attacks.
"NAME BY NAME"
Clad in longyis, traditional Burmese wrap-arounds tied at the waist, and
calling themselves the Arakan Rohingya Society for Peace & Human Rights,
the list makers say they are all too aware of accusations by the Myanmar
authorities and some foreigners that Rohingya refugees invent stories of
tragedy to win global support.
But they insist that when listing the dead they err on the side of
under-estimation.
Mohib Bullah, who was previously an aid worker, gives as an example the
riverside village of Tula Toli in Maungdaw district, where - according
to Rohingya who fled - more than 1,000 were killed. "We could only get
750 names, so we went with 750," he said.
"We went family by family, name by name," he added. "Most information
came from the affected family, a few dozen cases came from a neighbor,
and a few came from people from other villages when we couldn't find the
relatives."
In their former lives, the Rohingya list makers were aid workers,
teachers and religious scholars. Now after escaping to become refugees,
they say they are best placed to chronicle the events that took place in
northern Rakhine, which is out-of-bounds for foreign media, except on
government-organised trips.
"Our people are uneducated and some people may be confused during the
interviews and investigations," said Mohammed Rafee, a former
administrator in the village of Kyauk Pan Du who has worked on the
lists. But taken as a whole, he said, the information collected was
"very reliable and credible."
SPRAWLING PROJECT
Getting the full picture is difficult in the teeming dirt lanes of the
refugee camps. Crowds of people gather to listen - and add their
comments - amid booming calls to prayer from makeshift mosques and
deafening downpours of rain. Even something as simple as a date can
prompt an argument.
What began tentatively in the courtyard of a mosque after Friday prayers
one day last November became a sprawling project that drew in dozens of
people and lasted months.
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Mohib Bullah, a member of Arakan Rohingya Society for Peace and
Human Rights, writes after collecting data about victims of a
military crackdown in Myanmar, at Kutupalong camp in Cox's Bazar,
Bangladesh, April 21, 2018. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain
The project has its flaws. The handwritten lists were compiled by
volunteers, photocopied, and passed from person to person. The list
makers asked questions in Rohingya about villages whose official
names were Burmese, and then recorded the information in English.
The result was a jumble of names: for example, there were about 30
different spellings for the village of Tula Toli.
Wrapped in newspaper pages and stored on a shelf in the backroom of
a clinic, the lists that Reuters reviewed were labeled as beginning
in October 2016, the date of a previous exodus of Rohingya from
Rakhine. There were also a handful of entries dated 2015 and 2012.
And while most of the dates were European-style, with the day first
and then the month, some were American-style, the other way around.
So it wasn't possible to be sure if an entry was, say, May 9 or
September 5.
It is also unclear how many versions of the lists there are. During
interviews with Reuters, Rohingya refugees sometimes produced
crumpled, handwritten or photocopied papers from shirt pockets or
folds of their longyis.
The list makers say they have given summaries of their findings,
along with repatriation demands, to most foreign delegations,
including those from the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission, who
have visited the refugee camps.
A LEGACY FOR SURVIVORS
The list makers became more organized as weeks of labor rolled into
months. They took over three huts and held meetings, bringing in a
table, plastic chairs, a laptop and a large banner carrying the
group's name.
The MSF survey was carried out to determine how many people might
need medical care, so the number of people killed and injured
mattered, and the identity of those killed was not the focus. It is
nothing like the mini-genealogy with many individual details that
was produced by the Rohingya.
Mohib Bullah and some of his friends say they drew up the lists as
evidence of crimes against humanity they hope will eventually be
used by the International Criminal Court, but others simply hope
that the endeavor will return them to the homes they lost in
Myanmar.
"If I stay here a long time my children will wear jeans. I want them
to wear longyi. I do not want to lose my traditions. I do not want
to lose my culture," said Mohammed Zubair, one of the list makers.
"We made the documents to give to the U.N. We want justice so we can
go back to Myanmar."
Matt Wells, a senior crisis advisor for Amnesty International, said
he has seen refugees in some conflict-ridden African countries make
similar lists of the dead and arrested but the Rohingya undertaking
was more systematic. "I think that's explained by the fact that
basically the entire displaced population is in one confined
location," he said.
Wells said he believes the lists will have value for investigators
into possible crimes against humanity.
"In villages where we've documented military attacks in detail, the
lists we've seen line up with witness testimonies and other
information," he said.
Spokespeople at the ICC's registry and prosecutors' offices, which
are closed for summer recess, did not immediately provide comment in
response to phone calls and emails from Reuters.
The U.S. State Department also documented alleged atrocities against
Rohingya in an investigation that could be used to prosecute
Myanmar's military for crimes against humanity, U.S. officials have
told Reuters. For that and the MSF survey only a small number of the
refugees were interviewed, according to a person who worked on the
State Department survey and based on published MSF methodology.
MSF did not respond to requests for comment on the Rohingya lists.
The U.S. State Department declined to share details of its survey
and said it wouldn't speculate on how findings from any organization
might be used.
For Mohammed Suleman, a shopkeeper from Tula Toli, the Rohingya
lists are a legacy for his five-year-old daughter. He collapsed,
sobbing, as he described how she cries every day for her mother, who
was killed along with four other daughters.
"One day she will grow up. She may be educated and want to know what
happened and when. At that time I may also have died," he said. "If
it is written in a document, and kept safely, she will know what
happened to her family."
(Additional reporting by Shoon Naing and Poppy Elena McPherson in
YANGON and Toby Sterling in AMSTERDAM; Editing by John Chalmers and
Martin Howell)
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