Yahoo – AFP,
Nick Perry, September 11, 2017
The situation in Myanmar is a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing", the United Nations rights chief said on Monday, as the number of Rohingya Muslims fleeing the country for Bangladesh topped 300,000.
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Rohingya girl walks through a refugee camp in the Bangladeshi district of
Ukhia (AFP Photo/Munir Uz Zaman)
|
The situation in Myanmar is a "textbook example of ethnic cleansing", the United Nations rights chief said on Monday, as the number of Rohingya Muslims fleeing the country for Bangladesh topped 300,000.
The UN
warning came as it emerged the Dalai Lama had written to Aung San Suu Kyi
urging Myanmar's de facto civilian leader to find a peaceful solution to the
crisis in the mainly Buddhist country.
The
Rohingya, a stateless Muslim minority, have faced decades of persecution in
Myanmar where they are regarded as illegal immigrants.
But since
the latest upsurge in violence on August 25, hundreds of thousands have flooded
across the border into Bangladesh bringing stories of entire villages burned to
the ground by Buddhist mobs and Myanmar troops.
On Monday
the UN human rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein accused Myanmar of waging a
"systematic attack" on the Rohingya and warned that "ethnic
cleansing" seemed to be under way.
"Because
Myanmar has refused access to human rights investigators the current situation
cannot yet be fully assessed, but the situation seems a textbook example of
ethnic cleansing," he told the UN Human Rights Council.
![]() |
The
Rohingya are a stateless Muslim minority who have faced decades of
persecution in Myanmar, where they are regarded as illegal immigrants
(AFP Photo)
|
'Appalled'
Suu Kyi, a
Nobel peace laureate, has come in for strong international criticism over the
military crackdown on the Rohingya, which began when militants ambushed
security forces on August 25.
The UN
special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar has said the latest violence may
have left more than 1,000 dead, most of them Rohingya.
A further
27,000 ethnic Rakhine Buddhists as well as Hindus have also fled violence that
has gripped northern Rakhine, where international aid programmes have been severely
curtailed.
On Monday
it emerged that the Dalai Lama had joined fellow Nobel peace laureates Malala
Yousafzai and Archbishop Desmond Tutu in urging Suu Kyi to intervene.
"Questions
that are put to me suggest that many people have difficulty reconciling what
appears to be happening to Muslims there with Myanmar’s reputation as a
Buddhist country," the Tibetan spiritual leader wrote in a letter to Suu
Kyi shortly after the latest fighting broke out.
"I appeal to you and your fellow leaders to reach out to all sections of society to try to restore friendly relations throughout the population in a spirit of peace and reconciliation."
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A Rohingya
refugee carries two children in buckets as they arrive in Bangladesh
at Shah
Porir Dwip in Teknaf on September 9, 2017 (AFP Photo/Emrul KAMAL)
|
"I appeal to you and your fellow leaders to reach out to all sections of society to try to restore friendly relations throughout the population in a spirit of peace and reconciliation."
The UN
refugee agency says at least 313,000 Rohingya have now arrived in Bangladesh
from Myanmar's Rakhine state since August 25, around a third of the total
population of 1.1 million.
The true
figure could be even higher -- the UN said many new arrivals are still on the
move and are therefore left out of the calculations.
Most have
walked for days and the United Nations says many are sick, exhausted and in
desperate need of shelter, food and water.
Safura
Khatun, 60, was among the hundreds who crossed into Bangladesh on Monday.
She told
AFP it had taken her 15 days to reach Bangladesh from her village south of
Maungdaw, where her husband and three sons had been killed.
![]() |
Myanmar's
de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi has come in for strong international
criticism
over the military crackdown on the Rohingya (AFP Photo/ROMEO GACAD)
|
"I had
only water for the last five days," she said, rocking on the spot in a
yellow headscarf.
"I
don't know what I will do here. We will follow the others."
Refugee
camps and makeshift settlements near the border with Myanmar already hosted
hundreds of thousands of Rohingya before the latest influx and are now
completely overwhelmed.
That has
left tens of thousands of new arrivals with nowhere to shelter from the monsoon
rains.
Dhaka,
which initially tried to block the Rohingya from entering, said Monday it would
start registering all new arrivals.
The
Bangladesh government plans to build a huge new camp that will house a quarter
of a million refugees.
It remains
unclear when or whether they will be able to return.
![]() |
The UN
refugee agency says at least 313,000 Rohingya have now arrived in
Bangladesh
from Myanmar's Rakhine state since August 25 (AFP Photo/
Munir UZ ZAMAN)
|
The UN's
Zeid said he was "appalled" by reports that Myanmar security forces
were laying mines near the border to stop the Rohingya returning.
Three
Rohingya are reported to have been killed by a mine, and at least two more have
lost limbs. One of the victims was a young boy.
On Sunday
the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army militant group whose attacks sparked the
latest crackdown, declared a unilateral ceasefire to allow aid to reach the
increasingly desperate refugees.
There was
no immediate response from Myanmar's military, but on Saturday authorities said
they would set up three relief camps in Rohingya-majority areas.
Aung San Suu Kyi's global image is in tatters over the Rohingya crisis but she's still the star inside Myanmar https://t.co/G7n8xSFhyb pic.twitter.com/n7UjKyFhmS— AFP news agency (@AFP) September 7, 2017





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