Yahoo – AFP,
September 2, 2017
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| Food being prepared at an Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in Rakhine State, where the World Food Programme has now suspended aid (AFP Photo/STR) |
Yangon (AFP)
- The World Food Programme has suspended food aid in Myanmar's
violence-scorched Rakhine state, as the humanitarian situation deteriorates
with a surging death toll and tens of thousands -- both Rohingya Muslims and
ethnic Buddhists -- on the move.
The UN's
refugee agency late Saturday said some 60,000 mostly Rohingya Muslim refugees
had poured into Bangladesh since the latest round of fighting broke out eight
days ago, with the numbers expected to rise as thousands remain stuck on the
border.
Relief
agencies, including WFP, have repeatedly been accused by Myanmar authorities of
allowing their rations to fall into the hands of Rohingya militants, whose
attacks on police posts on August 25 sparked the most recent surge in violence.
Around
120,000 people -- most of them Rohingya Muslim civilians -- have relied on aid
hand-outs in camps since 2012, when religious riots killed scores and sparked a
crisis which is again burning through Rakhine state.
Over the
last five years Rakhine has been cut along ethnic and religious lines, but the
current violence is the worst yet.
Aid
agencies are routinely accused of a pro-Rohingya bias and the sudden flare-up
of unrest has renewed safety concerns, prompting relief work to be pulled back.
"All
WFP food assistance operations in Rakhine State have been suspended due to
insecurity... affecting 250,000 internally displaced and other most vulnerable
populations," the WFP said in a statement.
The
Rohingya, branded illegal immigrants in Myanmar and mostly denied citizenship,
make up the vast majority of the dead and displaced since 2012.
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Children
bathing at an Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in Sittwe,
Rakhine State
(AFP Photo/STR)
|
In the
ongoing bout of violence, 58,600 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh, according to
the latest figures from UNHCR.
Tens of thousands
have been turned away by Bangladeshi border officials, while scores have died
trying to cross the Naf river -- which divides the two countries -- in
makeshift boats and even on flotsam.
Dead left
unburied
Anwar, a
Rohingya man, was one of those stranded on the Myanmar side of the border on
Saturday evening, terrified soldiers would find them.
"I saw
three or four people who died along the way, there was no one to bury
them," he told AFP by phone, asking not to disclose his location or full
name.
He said it
had taken him, his wife and their seven children three days to walk to the
border and that they were hoping the darkness could provide them enough cover
to slip into Bangladesh as night fell.
He also
expressed anger at Rohingya militants who launched last week's attacks,
sparking a renewed Myanmar military crackdown and his family's desperate
flight.
"We do
not know them (the militants)," he said, adding: "We didn't do
anything."
On Friday,
Myanmar's army chief said nearly 400 people have died in the violence, among
them 370 Rohingya militants, while 11,000 ethnic Rakhine Buddhists, Hindus and
other minority groups have been internally displaced.
Myanmar
authorities have rejected help offered by foreign aid groups for the displaced
ethnic Rakhine, according to a statement by the European Commission's relief
assistance department.
As army
clearance operations continue, ECHO (European Civil Protection and Humanitarian
Aid Operations) said access to northern Rakhine remained "cut off".
Meanwhile
an "anti-UN/NGO propaganda campaign on Myanmar social media
continues", the statement added.
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Myanmar
police stand guard at an Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in
Sittwe,
Rakhine State (AFP Photo/STR)
|
'Humanitarian catastrophe'
Accounts
from Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh and Buddhists who fled to Sittwe, the
Rakhine state capital, indicate the death toll may be much higher.
The
worst-hit areas are off-limits to reporters. But unverifiable testimony has
trickled out, telling of tit-for-tat mass killings and villages being torched
by the army and the militants.
Pierre
Peron, spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs, warned disruption to aid supplies was having "a very real human
impact".
UN
Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Friday warned the spiral of violence
could lead to a "humanitarian catastrophe" and urged Myanmar's
government to provide security for aid agencies to reach those in need.
Shortly
before his comments, aid groups were again spotlighted by army chief Min Aung
Hlaing, whose office said WFP-labelled food and medicines had been found with
dead militants.
The office
of de facto civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi has also put out multiple
statements in the last week saying the same.
The
militants are fighting under the banner of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army
(ARSA), who say they are defending the ethnic minority from persecution by
Myanmar.
Despite
decades of persecution the Rohingya largely eschewed violence.
But the
ARSA emerged as a force in October last year when their attacks killed Myanmar
border police, prompting a crackdown by security forces which the UN says may
have amounted to ethnic cleansing.
#UPDATE UN says 60,000 #Rohingya Muslims have poured into #Bangladesh since the latest clashes in #Myanmar https://t.co/dHDU7s0QE1 pic.twitter.com/TU6d22UfMQ— AFP news agency (@AFP) September 2, 2017



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