By @MayWongCNA
YANGON: She stood
silently in a crowd of more than 20 people, as she cradled her two-year-old
child on her hip.
But as Sarbeda heard
others relay their stories to foreign journalists of how their husbands or sons
have been arrested, she started to weep.
That is when I asked
why she was crying. Her experience of how her 14-year-old son was arrested
brought a flood of tears.
Sarbeda said the boy
was working in the fields when security personnel arrested him, suspecting him
of being involved in alleged terrorist activities.
An accusation she
vehemently denies, saying “they took him without any question. My son is so
young.”
Sarbeda’s
14-year-old son is one of at least 10 juveniles arrested alongside more than
400 Rohingyas accused of being involved in violent attacks since Oct 9 last
year.
She has no idea how
he is doing now or when he might be released.
This mother was just
one of many who came forward with fear, helplessness and anxiety written all
over her face.
One after another,
women, many carrying children in their arms, rushed up to the foreign
journalists who entered their villages as part of a government-led visit to
showcase the latest development on the ground.
The five-day
arranged visit to several villages in northern Rakhine state was the third such
trip organised by the government.
But it is the first
allowing international journalists into the area after the initial attacks.
The aim – to show
how the government has nothing to hide and that allegation of abuse and
atrocities against the Rohingyas are, according to the authorities,
exaggerated.
Rakhine Chief
Minister Nyi Pu defended the security forces’ actions saying “when we are
working on security issues, there are terrorist attacks and conflicts happening
so there can be some casualties.
"We are not
performing genocide. It is very wrong to exaggerate the small casualties.”
To a certain extent,
it must be said that the Information Ministry official leading the visit
accommodated the journalists’ requests of wanting to visit villages off the
prescribed list and to speak to any villager without the presence of the
authorities.
Without the watchful
eye of officials, another villager called Lalmuti stood by her father’s grave
and told journalists that “my mother said my father was burned to death by the
military. They put my father in the house and burned the house and him.”
The 23-year-old said
“after three months, they took her (mother) for questioning and threw her into
jail.”
When asked if she’s
worried she might get into trouble for sharing her story, Lalmuti simply
replied “Why would I be afraid? I am telling the truth.”
There were others,
however, who didn’t want to be seen speaking to journalists, for fear they may
be hauled up for questioning. One pulled me away from earshot of others and
related to me how he was beaten and threatened by security forces.
Yet another kept
looking over his shoulders while describing how insufferable their lives have
become, only to quickly disappear into the crowd, waving me away, believing he
was being watched.
The journalists had
insisted that the heavily-armed security personnel escort us only to the
entrance of villages, but some Rohingyas worry about government informants
among them.
That was not
paranoia because soon after, a man among the Rohingya villagers was caught
red-handed taking pictures of those speaking to the media and recording the
conversations.
As journalists track
through fields and walk through yet another Rohingya village, a woman slipped a
hand-written note to a reporter.
That note accused
security forces of arbitrary arrests including a 15-year-old boy. What is more
damning is that the note said that on the day of Eid al-Fitr, one of the
holiest days on the Muslim calendar, border police guards came into the village
and brutally raped some women.
The distress among
the Rohingyas met throughout the visit is palpable. The Oct 9 attacks against three
border posts, killing nine officers, sparked a security lockdown in areas of
Buthidaung and Maungdaw in northern Rakhine state.
The area is home to
a majority of some one million Rohingyas, deemed as illegal immigrants by
Myanmar.
The government initially
accused a group they identified as Aqa Mul Mujahidin as the terrorists who
launched the initial attacks.
Myanmar’s security
forces then executed a “clearance operation” to hunt down the perpetrators.
Unfortunately,
according to the United Nations, that led to more than 75,000 Rohingyas fleeing
from Myanmar to neighbouring Bangladesh.
Allegations of
arbitrary arrests, abuses, extra-judicial killings and security personnel
raping Rohingya women prompted the exodus.
But the Myanmar
government has denied most of the allegations, while rubbishing the number of
Rohingyas who have fled the area.
The government
claims only about 22,000 Rohingyas have left the area after the incident. For
those who remained in their villages today, it was out of pure desperation that
they decided to step up to tell their story.
DESPERATE
TO GET THE WORD OUT
The Rohingyas were
unsure of what the journalists could do for them or if their lives would be in
jeopardy after they speak to the media.
But what is clear is
that without phones, other communication devices and being rather isolated in
rural, difficult-to-get-to villages, they simply wanted to get their word out –
to whoever is willing to listen.
o desperate were
some that they waved us down from a riverbank as we were traveling past in
speedboats.
A group of some 20
women attracted our attention by calling us to shore and pointing us towards
their village.
That’s when we knew
we had to stop, turn back and speak with them. Once on shore, we were quickly
surrounded by many Rohingya women wanting to relay their experiences of how
their sons, brothers, fathers, husbands have been arrested as suspects and how
they’re unsure of what will happen to them.
One woman,
48-year-old Mamuda Hatu, spoke of how authorities arrested her 27-year-old son accusing
him of going to Bangladesh and potentially having connections with terrorists.
But she said “some
falsely reported that he went to Bangladesh. That's why he was arrested”. She
said her “son has no connection with the terrorists. I have only one son. They
took him for no reason.”
Such experiences are
similar to many that have surfaced in various media over the last nine months
post-Oct 9 but it is difficult to authenticate and verify the facts.
But that doesn’t
mean it is not true.
Hence the call by
the international community and the United Nations to allow a UN-backed
fact-finding mission to enter Myanmar and to investigate the allegations and
accusations made against the security forces.
But Myanmar has
strongly rejected that suggestion.
The country’s
National Security Advisor, Thaung Tun reiterated Myanmar’s position that such a
mission wills “only aggravate the situation on the ground”.
He said such a
mission was derived from “allegations of wide-spread human rights abuses by the
Myanmar security forces” and is “less than constructive”.
Speaking to foreign
diplomats and international aid agencies based in Yangon recently, Mr Thaung
Tun said “since October 2016, 44 civilians have been murdered and 27 abducted”.
And based on recent
reports of abductions and killings of Rohingyas, he said “it is clear that
Muslim militants are taking out Muslim villagers who are perceived to be
collaborating with the government.”
He added “there is
evidence of increasing terrorist activities in northern Rakhine” with the
discovery of a terrorist training camp and tunnel in Maungdaw, Rakhine.
This is the same
narrative given by Myanmar’s Border Guard Police Commander, Brigadier-General
San Lwin.
Brigadier-General
San Lwin said “the terrorists conduct secret trainings in the villages. There
are some murder cases because the terrorists ask the villagers to kill the
village administrator or certain people.”
He suggested that
some of the violence could be due to personal or business fallouts, while in
other cases, “there can be some involvement by the terrorists.”
Seemingly to drive
the point home about terrorist activities among the Rohingyas, authorities
brought journalists to a location where a house was burnt to the ground in one
of the Buthidaung villages.
There, the
authorities related how a shoot-out between security forces and those in the
house happened in July.
They said Muslim
militants in the house fired at security forces who were conducting checks
after receiving information about suspicious activities there.
Such incidents and
increased security threats in Northern Rakhine have also affected Rohingyas
already living in internally displaced persons or IDP camps just outside the
state’s capital Sittwe.
The Rohingyas were
placed in IDP camps after violence broke out between the Buddhists and Muslims
in 2012.
One such camp is
Thet Kay Pyin IDP housing some 6,000 Rohingyas, near Sittwe. Rohingyas are not
allowed to leave the camps without authorisation and they complained of a lack
of education, healthcare, food and unemployment.
I saw children who
were severely malnourished with the sick elderly unable to receive medical
treatment.
A resident, Zadah
asked “we’re not animals. So why we have to live in this area? Why we have to
live in this detention centre for five years?”
The government
insists the continuous violence in Rakhine is due to terrorist attacks or
Muslim militants killing Muslim villagers. However, the Rohingyas say they are
being discriminated and violently targeted by security force personnel.
Whatever the case,
it is clear the Rohingyas continue to live in fear, the security situation
remains vulnerable and a complete resolution seems nowhere in sight right now.
For Myanmar, which
is trying to attain full democracy and to achieve national reconciliation, a
divided nation and many other challenges will make those goals even more of a
struggle.
Source:
CNA/mn