By Esther Htusan | AP
THA PYAY TAW, Myanmar — Every day before sunrise, dozens
of fishermen, shivering against the cold, shove out onto the Bay of Bengal on
makeshift rafts made out of plastic jugs, bamboo and twine, just steps away
from the sturdy and much safer wooden boats they had used for years.
They were barred from using their boats three months ago
by Myanmar authorities who say they’re trying to prevent insurgents from
entering or leaving the country by sea. The ban is one small part of a sweeping
and violent counter-insurgency campaign in Rakhine state, home to the
long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority, where authorities have been accused
of widespread abuses.
Desperate to feed their families, Rohingya fishermen in
the coastal villages that dot Rakhine’s Maungdaw district skirt the ban by
setting out on dangerous, jerry-rigged rafts that use yellow cooking oil jugs
to keep them afloat. The vessels are not technically boats, and therefore not
technically illegal.
“What is the difference for us?” asks 35-year-old
Mohammed, a Rohingya fisherman and the father of four children in Tha Pyay Taw
village. “We will die in the village from starvation if we don’t go out, or we
can risk our lives to get some fish and fill our stomachs. We have nothing to
eat.”
The Associated Press is identifying Mohammed only by his
first name out of security concerns.
As long as the villagers leave their big boats on the
shore, the police allow them to bob along the choppy waves — for a price.
As noon approached on a recent day, dozens of villagers
paddled their plastic rafts back to shore, fresh fish in tow. As they unloaded
the day’s catch, a policeman holding a sack approached and demanded some fish.
The fishermen described the transaction as typical.
“We have to give it to them or they won’t allow us to go
again to the sea,” said Kalumya, a 40-year-old fisherman who uses only one
name.
The police officer refused to speak to The Associated
Press.
Muslims in an overwhelmingly Buddhist nation, the
Rohingya have long faced persecution in Myanmar, where most are denied
citizenship. The latest outbreak of violence was triggered by October attacks
on guard posts near the Bangladesh border that killed nine police officers.
While the attackers’ identities and motives are unclear, the government
launched a massive counter-insurgency sweep through Rohingya areas in western
Rakhine state.
Most of Myanmar’s more than 1 million Rohingya live in
Rakhine, which borders Bangladesh.
Tha Pyay Taw was not directly affected by the violence,
which occurred in villages a two- to three-hour drive away. But “for reasons of
regional security, the fishing boats were banned from going out on the sea,”
said Hashim Ulah, the government-appointed village administrator in Maungdaw.
Mohammed said the villagers have no good options.
“There is the risk of getting shot by the navy in Myanmar
or Bangladesh if we go out in our boats,” he said. “Or we may get caught in a
storm on our rafts. There is no choice for us.” The fishermen have managed to
keep safe so far, though they take their makeshift vessels far enough out to
sea that from shore, they look like mere dots on the horizon.
The United Nations estimates that 65,000 Rohingya have
fled Myanmar across the border to Bangladesh in the past three months to escape
the government’s “clearance operation.” Rohingya villagers and activists say
hundreds of civilians have been killed. The number cannot be verified because
authorities have limited aid workers’ and journalists’ access to areas where
the deaths occurred. Recent satellite images released by the group Human Rights
Watch showed thousands of houses were burned.
“Even in the future, only trouble awaits the Rohingya,”
said Mohammed. “I don’t see any improvement in our lives anymore.”