71 killed amid fresh violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state
At least 71 people including 12 security forces were killed as Rohingya Muslims besieged border posts in northern Rakhine state, Myanmar’s authorities said on Friday — the highest declared toll in a single day since fighting broke out last year.
The western state is bisected by religious hatred focused on the stateless Rohingya Muslim minority, who are reviled by many Buddhists and perceived as illegal immigrants.
Friday’s fighting exploded around Rathedaung township, where there has been a heavy build up of Myanmar troops in recent weeks, with reports filtering out of killings by shadowy groups, army-blockaded villages and a renewed exodus of refugees heading towards neighbouring Bangladesh.
Some 20 police posts came under attack in the early hours of Friday by an estimated 150 insurgents, some carrying guns and using homemade explosives, Myanmar’s military said.
"The military and police members are fighting back together against extremist Bengali terrorists," Commander-in-Chief minister Aung Hlaing said in a statement on Facebook, using the state’s description for Rohingya Muslims.
The office of de-facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi said 12 security officials had been killed alongside 59 Muslims.
One resident in Maungdaw, the main town in northern Rakhine, said gunfire could be heard throughout the night.
"We are still hearing gunshots now, we dare not to go out from our house," a resident said by phone, asking not to be named.
Despite years of persecution, the Rohingya largely eschewed violence.
But a previously unknown Muslim group emerged as a force in October 2016 under the banner of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), which claims to be leading an insurgency based in the remote May Yu mountain range bordering Bangladesh.
A Twitter account (@ARSA_Official) which frequently posts purportedly from the group confirmed its fighters were engaging Myanmar’s military in the area and accused the soldiers of carrying out atrocities in recent weeks.
Myanmar says the group is headed by Rohingya jihadists who were trained abroad but it is unclear how large the network is.
Suu Kyi’s office posted pictures of weapons that had been taken from Muslims, mainly home-made bombs and rudimentary knives and clubs.
Friday’s violence pushed more Rohingya to leave, with two boats containing around 150 women, children and elderly people attempting to cross the Naf river into Bangladesh.
But they were pushed back.
"They were scared. We felt pain to send them back," a Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) officer told AFP.
Violence after Annan report
The flare up came just hours after former UN chief Kofi Annan released a milestone report detailing conditions inside Rakhine and offering ways to heal the festering sectarian tensions there.
Commissioned by Myanmar’s own government, it urged the scrapping of restrictions of movement and citizenship imposed on the roughly one million-strong Rohingya community in Rakhine.
In a statement Annan said he was "gravely concerned" by the latest outbreak of fighting.
"The alleged scale and gravity of these attacks mark a worrying escalation of violence," he said.
The UN’s top official in Myanmar, Renata Lok-Dessallien, called on all sides to "refrain from violence, protect civilians (and) restore law and order".
The wedge of Rakhine closest to Bangladesh has been in lockdown since October 2016.
Deadly attacks by the Muslims on border police sparked a military response that left scores dead and forced some 87,000 people to flee to Bangladesh.
The UN believes those security ‘clearances’ may have amounted to ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya, a mainly Muslim minority living in Buddhist Myanmar.
The army and Aung San Suu Kyi’s civilian government vehemently deny allegations of widespread abuses, including rapes and murders.
They have so far refused to grant visas to UN investigators tasked with probing the allegations.
Myanmar security forces have conducted sporadic operations to flush out suspected Muslims throughout 2017, often resulting in casualties among Rohingya villagers.
They have spoken of their fear at being trapped in between security forces and the Muslims, who are accused of conducting a shadowy assassination campaign against perceived collaborators with the state.
Access to the area is severely restricted and verifying information is difficult.
Activists and supporters on both sides of the sectarian divide have a history of posting false images and footage online.
Source: First post