Thursday, 27 March 2014

Buddhist mobs attack aid workers' homes in Myanmar

Source omaha, 27 March

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Buddhist-led mobs tore through streets hurling stones at the offices and residences of international aid workers in Myanmar's western Rakhine state Thursday, prompting the evacuation of almost all non-essential staff, residents and officials said. Some were flown out, others placed under protection at a police guest house.

There were no immediate indications anyone was hurt in the violence, which started in the state capital, Sittwe, late Wednesday and picked up again early Thursday, with angry crowds swelling in size from several hundred to more than 1,000.

At least one building was looted and three cars damaged, aid workers said on condition of anonymity because they feared retaliation.

State-run television said a commission would be formed to investigate the incident.

Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist nation of 60 million, emerged from a half-century of military rule in 2011. But newfound freedoms of expression that accompanied its transition to democracy have given voice to religious hatred, causing violence that has left up to 280 people dead and sent another 140,000 fleeing their homes.

Most of the victims have been members of the long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority.

Aid groups that have been providing care for those now living in crowded camps — where they have little access to food, education or health care — have for months faced threats and intimidation by Buddhist Rakhine, hampering their ability to work.

Last month, the government stopped the Nobel Peace Prize-winning aid group, Doctors Without Borders, from working in the state altogether, in part because it had hired Rohingya.

Tensions in Rakhine have reached fever pitch ahead of next month's national census — the first in 30 years. Many Buddhists say members of the religious minority should not be allowed to identify themselves as Rohingya — while not listed among the 135 ethnicities, there is an "other" category where respondents could write it in — over fears it could legitimize their existence in the country.

Though many of their families arrived generations ago, they have been denied citizenship by law.

As part of the anti-Rohingya campaign, Buddhist flags have been place in front of almost every house and office in Sittwe in recent days.

Up to 300 people surrounded Malteser International late Wednesday following reports that a woman had removed the flag from the group's office, Rakhine state spokesman Win Myaing said, adding that police had to fire 40 to 50 warning shots to disperse the crowd.

The organization could not immediately be reached for comment, but residents said the woman who took down the flag was seen holding it near her waist, a sign of disrespect.

The violence continued Thursday, with more than 1,000 people running through a street that houses international aid workers, throwing rocks at homes and damaging several of the residences.

"If police stopped them at one place, the mob moved to a different location and threw stones at (nongovernmental organization) houses," Sittwe resident Aung Than said by phone.

Police escorted aid workers from their homes for safety reasons Thursday, he said.

Dozens were taken to a guest house.

Other aid groups said they were evacuating all local and foreign non-essential staff from Sittwe, some on regularly scheduled flights, others on charters. Nearly a dozen arrived in Myanmar's main city of Yangon on Thursday afternoon, some carrying blue "Save the Children" bags.

Among those shepherded to safety Thursday were three Americans.

The U.S. Embassy in Yangon said it was deeply concerned by the mob violence and the inability of security forces to stop its spread.

"Unhindered and regular humanitarian access to communities in need, and the safety and security of humanitarian aid workers to ensure the effective delivery of these services, are core international principles," it reminded the government in a statement.

Local Rakhine residents have been angry with international non-governmental staff since communal violence first erupted in mid-2012, accusing them of being biased in favor of the Muslim community. There have been several peaceful protests in the past, but this is the first time property of the international aid organizations has been so directly targeted.

Authorities were driving around the city announcing the 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew through loudspeakers, said Tun Tha, a Sittwe resident, adding that soldiers and police were being stationed near the offices of the United Nations and international aid groups.

A statement by the U.N. resident and humanitarian coordinator in Myanmar, Toily Kurbanov, urged the government to protect aid workers and warned that "any reduction of humanitarian presence could negatively affect the protection of vulnerable people."

He called on authorities to make sure those responsible would be held accountable.

Almost all of Myanmar's 1.3 million Rohingya live in Rakhine. Some descend from families that have been here for generations. Others arrived more recently from neighboring Bangladesh. All have been denied citizenship, rendering them stateless. For decades, they have been unable to travel freely, practice their religion, or work as teachers or doctors. They need special approval to marry and are the only people in the country barred from having more than two children.

 
 

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Another Set Ablaze Rohingya Shops in Dudan, Northern Maungdaw

Source Burmatimesnet, 26 March
Rohingya Shops in Dudan, Northern Maungdaw, Set Ablaze

Burma Times – Northern Maungdaw, Arakan- Around 4.15 AM on 26th March 2014, Rohingya shops at the market of village of Dudan (Ludain), northern Maungdaw, were set ablaze apparently by two unidentified 969 Group. It has been reported that seven shops have burnt to ashes to till date. Many other shops have also been partially destroyed.

"Local Rohingyas spotted two stranger Rakhines nearby the market of Ludain just before the curfew time on 25th March 2014 night. And the Rohingya shops caught fire around3AM of the same night (i.e.26th March 2014 morning). There were around 40 shops at the market. Of them, seven shops got burnt to ashes. Many other shops were partially burnt. Some Rohingyas were able to save some shop-stuffs" said a local of the village.

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Notorious Police Burned The Genitals Of Five Rohingya

Source RB, March 24
                             

Photo: Notorious Police Burned The Genitals Of Five Rohingya Women    http://bit.ly/1eFrp2w
RB News March 24, 2014

Maungdaw, Arakan – Police from Kyain Chaung police station have burned the genitals of five innocent Rohingya women after being arrested on March 10th and 15th on false allegations.

An innocent Rohingya woman from Sin Thay Pyin hamlet of Longdon village tract was arrested by police on false allegation that she torched houses within the village. More than 100 houses were burnt down to ashes on March 10th. Although Phan Myaung hamlet of Nga Sar Kyu village tract was a distance away and a there is stream that is 100 feet wide between the two hamlets, 72 houses in Phan Myaung hamlet was also burnt down. The fire wasn't accidental but it was systematically torched by Rakhine extremists by using chemicals.

Again, fire started in the same hamlets on March 15th and 15 houses burnt down to ashes. Four innocent Rohingya women were arrested on that day and were brought to Kyain Chaung police station. The police harassed them by various ways. They burnt their genitals with candles. The women were sent to Kyain Chaung hospital on March 16th for the treatment. The doctor of the hospital, Dr. Nu Kaythi Zan blamed the police for inhumanly burning the genitals of the women, according to locals.

On March 17th, the women were sent to the court in Maungdaw for interrogation and later brought back to Kyain Chaung police station. As one woman has a baby who still in need of mother's milk, the police brought the baby to the police station through the village administrator. The villagers from Kyain Chaung provided 3 sets of clothes for the women as they don't have the clothes to change into.

From March 21st, the women were brought to Maungdaw police station and now they are under custody of Maungdaw police, the locals told RB News.

MYRAF contributed in reporting.

Friday, 21 March 2014

Burma: pipeline plans behind Rohingya cleansing?

Source ww4report, 19 March

Burma's persecuted Muslim Rohingya people were in the news again over the weekend with the Thai navy's denial that its forces opened fire on a group of refugees off the country's southwestern coast last month, killing at least two. Survivors said that Thai naval troops fired a boat of around 20 refugees off Thailand's Phang Nga province on Feb. 22, as they jumped into the water to escape custody. "Navy personnel fired into the air three times and told us not to move," a refugee told Human Rights Watch (HRW). "But we were panicking and jumped off the boat, and then they opened fire at us in the water." More than 100,000 Rohingyas have been displaced since ethnic violence broke out in western Burma last year. Burma refuses to recognize the Rohingya as citizens and labels the minority of about 800,000 as "illegal" immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh—which in turn disavows them as nationals.  (BBC News, March 15; Press TV, March 13)
  
The massacres against the Rohingya occurred in June and then again in October last year, leaving thousnads living as displaced persons in camps in the Burmese state of Arakan, with more having fled for Bangladesh, Thailand and elsewhere. After the first massacre in June,Human Rights Watch stated that "Burmese security forces committed killings, rape, and mass arrests against Rohingya Muslims after failing to protect both them and Arakan Buddhists." After the second wave of violence in October, Human Rights Watch again stated that "attacks and arson" against Rohingya "were at times carried out with the support of state security forces and local government officials."

Last week the London-based Islamic Human Rights Commission warned: "We are extremely concerned about the increase in propaganda against the minority Rohingya in Burma. It suggests that there is a high possibility of a third massacre against the Muslim minority." IHRC chair Massoud Shadjareh said, "There is a hidden genocide taking place in Burma, and we must speak out before even more of the Rohingya are murdered.  The international community need to come together and stop a third wave of violence taking place."

Much of the violence has been in the port of Sittwe, which is to be the starting point for the new Shwe pipeline project due to open later this year. The Shwe pipeline will allow oil from the Persian Gulf states and Africa to be pumped to China, bypassing a slower shipping route through the Strait of Malacca. It will also ship gas from Arakan's offshore fields to southwest China.

Speaking to Oil Change International, Jamila Hanan of UK-based Save the Rohingya said: "We are anticipating a third massacre of the Rohingya on the same scale which took place in Rwanda. We have been informed that this will take place sometime between now and mid-April." Hanan added: "There is a definite link between the oil development and the elimination of the Rohingya. The Rohingya are being cleared out of Sittwe which is being developed as a deep sea port to take oil tankers from the Middle East. There is huge number of economic developments around the port of Sittwe as a result of the new pipeline."

Potentially lucrative oil and gas blocs which have previously been off limits due to sanctions are also at stake in Arakan. Next month, Burma plans to launch a much-anticipated bidding for 30 offshore oil and gas blocs, likely to receive bids from majors such as Chevron, Total and ConocoPhillips. "Our politicians must put their own economic interests aside and act urgently to prevent this imminent human disaster," said Hanan. "Never before has the public been so informed through social media that a massacre was about to happen—our governments must not be allowed to sit back and do nothing." (Oil Change, March 18)

Thursday, 20 March 2014

Another Fire In Longdon Village Tract In Maungdaw

Source RB, 19 March

Maungdaw, Arakan – For the third time, a fire has been reported in Longdon village tract in Maungdaw Township of Arakan state. The fire didn't burn many houses but it wasn't accidental. As usual, it was a systematic torching.

The fire started on the roof of a Rohingya house at 10 pm on 19/03/14 in Kyun Gaung hamlet of Longdon village tract in Maungdaw Township. The fire spread to the Madarasa (Islamic School) but the Rohingya villagers managed to extinguish the fire once it did. The house and the Madarasa were damaged by the fire but not completely burnt.

The villagers said that the fire wasn't an accidental one as it started from the roof of the house. They said that extremists are systematically torching the structures.

At 9 pm a group of 5 Rakhine extremists holding swords and patrol gallon cans entered Ridaa hamlet of Aung Sit Pyin village tract in Maungdaw Township to torch the houses but the extremists couldn't implement their plan as the villagers saw them. Although the Rohingya villagers tried to catch them in order to hand them over to the authorities, all five managed to escape from the village.

Sunday, 9 March 2014

11 Homes, A Shop And A Mosque Burnt Into Ashes In Duchiradan Middle Hamlet

Source RB, March 9

Maungdaw, Arakan – A fire broke out in Duchiradan middle hamlet on the morning of March 9, 2014 at 10:30am in the middle hamlet in Duchiradan village in the Maungdaw Township of Arakan State. 11 Rohingya houses, a shop and a mosque burnt down into ashes there.

A local told RB News; "Maungdaw district and township administrator came to Duchiradan after the incident. Two Rohingya women from the east hamlet claimed that they saw four police entered into the village by riding two motorbikes and the fire broke out 20 minutes after they got into village. The women were arrested immediately and taken to the Maungdaw police station."

Another local from Duchiradan said; "Only two houses and a mosque were burnt down in the beginning but another fire broke out from northern side after the police forces entered into the village from all sides while we were extinguishing the fire at the first two houses and the mosque. Finally we lost another 9 houses and a shop." He explained RB News how he saw the two houses and a mosque were burning and how the fire popped up from another side of the village as a different group of police entered. Villagers who were fighting the fire were forced to flee from their effort when the police entered. 

The owners of the houses and shop lost in the fire are:

(1) Muzawbawr S/o Issali  

(2) Salimullah S/o Mamed Hussein 

(3) Zawfaw Hussein S/o Issali  

(4) Sawmaid S/o Zawfaw Hussein  

(5) Ameen S/o Musali  

(6) Shabir Ahmed S/o Saleh Ahmed  

(7) Sultan Ahmed S/o Tawzum Ali  

(8) Yaseen S/o Tawzum Ali  

(9) Noor Ameen S/o Kalaya  

(10) Mamed Alam S/o Dawbir 

(11) Noor Ahmed S/o Ruskum Ali  

(12) A Shop of Shukur Ahmed

The police torched the houses in at that time, mostly abandoned Duchiradan's west hamlet on the last week of January 2014 and made false news that the houses were torched by the owners themselves. Often holding witnesses and forcing them to sign papers to clear local authority of any wrongdoing. Placing blame on the owners of the property. 

The two female witnesses who were arrested after talking about the police presence for the fire began were held in similar fashion as the witness in January. Forced to say that the fire was started by the locals. Their names are Daw Lay Doe and Daw Halima. They were released by police after fulfilling this demand. Now the Ministry of Information of Myanmar posted in their news portal and said that the burnt properties in were also torched by the owners themselves.

"As usual it is a joke by Ye Htut, presidential spokesman. Everyone who has good ability in thinking can imagine whether it could be true or not. Ye Htut will never torch his house to get promotion. Ministry of Information is (there) to propagate and they never write anything about their crimes. They are (there) to protect their government. They never circulate any correct information in their life time. Now this type of propaganda is becoming nothing but a big joke for the international community." a Rohingya activist told RB News.

Sunday, 2 March 2014

Style of Myanmar backtracks on aid group expulsion

Source Aljazeera, 2 Mar

"Doctors Without Borders had been allowed to resume work in Kashin and Shan states, as well as the Yangon region but not for Rohingya in Arakan state region."

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Myanmar government accused MSF of being impartial and lacking transparency [EPA].

A day after Doctors Without Borders announced its expulsion from Myanmar, the government has backpedaled, saying the aid group will be allowed to resume operations everywhere but Rakhine, a state plagued by bouts of sectarian violence.

The Nobel Peace Prize-winning group, known by its French acronym MSF, said in a statement that it had been allowed to resume work in Kashin and Shan states, as well as the Yangon region.

"While MSF is encouraged by this and will resume these activities for now, MSF remains extremely concerned about the fate of tens of thousands of vulnerable people in Rakhine state who currently face a humanitarian medical crisis," it said.

"All MSF services are provided based on medical need only, regardless of ethnicity, religion or any other factor."

The group has been giving care in Rakhine state to both ethnic Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims, a mostly stateless minority who live in apartheid-like conditions and who otherwise have little access to health care.

The United Nations and human rights groups say at least 40 Rohingya were killed by security forces and ethnic Rakhine Buddhist civilians in a restricted area of the state in January.

Myanmar's government denies that any massacre took place.

Government spokesman, Ye Htut, accused MSF in comments to media on Friday of falsely reporting that it had treated victims near the scene of the alleged mass killing.

Negotiations continue

Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist nation of 60 million people, has been grappling with sectarian violence since it moved from dictatorship to a nominally civilian government in 2011.

Up to 280 people have been killed and more than 140,000 others forced to flee their homes, most of them Rohingya.

Doctors Without Borders, which provides care across religious, ethnic and racial lines, has come under fire for working on the behalf of the Rohingya.

It was told earlier in the week that its license was being revoked, in part because it was hiring "Bengalis," the name Myanmar's government uses to refer to Rohingya. The group also was accused of being impartial and lacking transparency.

Ye Htut said negotiations were continuing between the Ministry of Health and Doctors Without Borders about the aid agency's work in Rakhine

A Young Boy Suffering Tonsil Pain Died At Sittwe Hospital After Injection By Nurse

Source RB, 2 Mar

Photo: A Young Boy Suffering Tonsil Pain Died At Sittwe Hospital After Injection By Nurse    http://bit.ly/1hyjLIa    (Photo: Kyaw Swar Win/RB News)

Two year old boy, Aung Myo Khant (Photo: Kyaw Swar Win/RB News)

Sittwe, Arakan – A young boy from Aung Mingalar ward of Sittwe, the capital city of Arakan state, who was suffering from tonsil pain died in Sittwe Geberal hospital after injection by a nurse on March 1, 2014.

A two year old boy, Aung Myo Khant, son of Maung Maung Khine, was admitted the government run hospital in Sittwe on Wednesday, February 26th. His family was instructed to admit him to the hospital by local doctors. The young boy died on March 1, 2014 at 4:45 pm. 

"He wasn't in serious condition and needed no surgery according to local doctors. He was instructed to be admitted to the government hospital. His situation was quite alright during past three days. Here the procedure is we need to buy the required injection from outside and need to keep with the patient at the hospital. The nurse or doctor used to come to the bed at the hospital and ask the patient or caretaker to provide the injection. Then the nurse gives injection at that place." a resident from Aung Mingalar explained about the procedure of the government hospital to RB News.

He continued "Yesterday at 2 pm a nurse came to the bed of Aung Myo Khant. She said she has to give injection. The caretaker of the patient was in fear to ask why the nurse didn't ask for the injection from the patient. At the end the nurse gave an injection to the young boy. The boy died after two and half hours after getting the injection."

The Rohingya residents in Aung Mingalar are shocked to know about the death of the young boy. As the boy died after the injection of the nurse which wasn't provided by the patient's caretaker, the people in Aung Mingalar believed that the boy hadn't died normally. 

They have a big doubt about the nurse. As the law in Arakan state does not protect the Rohingyas they are unable to file a complaint against the death of the boy. The people said they are unable to do anything but they are very sad for the death of the boy.