MASS GRAVES SUGGEST SYSTEMATIC KILLING OF ROHINGYA IN MYANMAR
Mass Graves Suggest Systematic Killing Of Rohingya In Myanmar |
A new report discloses at least five previously unreported mass graves in
Myanmar, adding further evidence of the systematic killing of Rohingya Muslimcivilians by the country’s military.
More than two dozen Rohingya refugees living in temporary shelters in
neighboring Bangladesh confirmed the existence of the mass graves in interviews
with The Associated Press, and suggested more are yet to be discovered.
The Myanmar government has acknowledged only one mass grave, which it
said contains the remains of 10 “terrorists” in the village of Inn Din. But
survivors in refugee camps shared accounts with AP of family homes torched,
towns ambushed with gunfire, and small children and elderly thrown into flames.
Mass graves show 'systematic slaughter' of Rohingyas in Myanmar |
Refugees told AP of an Aug. 27 attack in which more than 200 soldiers
stormed the village of Gu Dar Pyin and brought with them shovels to dig mass
graves and acid to burn away the faces and hands of victims to prevent
identification of the bodies.
“It was a mixed-up jumble of corpses piled on top of each other,” Noor
Kadir, a survivor of the attack, told AP. “I felt such sorrow for them.”
Thousands of Rohingyas have fled Myanmar since the military launched a
campaign of violence against them in late 2016.
Those who have been displaced fear renewed violence if they go back to
their home country, though Myanmar is working on a repatriation agreement with
Bangladesh to return the Rohingya refugees. Myanmar’s government maintains that
members of the Muslim group are foreigners, and does not allow them
citizenship.
Myanmar’s civil leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate and former
political prisoner, has denied damning reports of state-sanctioned abuse
against the minority Muslims in the Buddhist-majority country. But human rights
organizations, including Amnesty International and the United Nations, report
abuses that some say look increasingly like genocide.
The assaults carried out by state officials and Buddhist extremists have
included rape, arson, shootings, beatings and torture, and amount to ethnic
cleansing and crimes against humanity, according to international rights
organizations.
“What the Myanmar government claims to be the conduct of military or
security operations is actually an established pattern of domination,
aggression and violations against ethnic groups,” Yanghee Lee, U.N. special
rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, said in a report dated Feb. 1.
Last week, former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a veteran U.S.
diplomat, abruptly resigned from an international panel established to advise
Myanmar on the Rohingya crisis. In a letter announcing his decision, Richardson
decried the country’s lack of “moral leadership” and said he could no longer
“in good conscience serve in this role.”
Source: AP
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