Photo: Bangladesh border officials denying boatloads of Rohingya refugees from Burma entry at the port town of Shah Porir Dweep, Bangladesh, on June 18, 2012
© 2012 Richard Pearshouse/Human Rights Watch
Abuses Follow Horrific June Violence Between Arakan Buddhists and
Rohingya
Burmese security forces committed killings, rape, and mass arrests against
Rohingya Muslims after failing to protect both them and Arakan Buddhists during
deadly sectarian violence in western Burma in June 2012, Human Rights Watch
said in a new report released today. Government restrictions on humanitarian
access to the Rohingya community have left many of the over 100,000 people
displaced and in dire need of food, shelter, and medical care.
The 56-page report, “‘The
Government Could Have Stopped This’: Sectarian Violence and Ensuing Abuses in
Burma’s Arakan State,” describes how the Burmese authorities failed
to take adequate measures to stem rising tensions and the outbreak of sectarian
violence in Arakan State. Though the army eventually contained the mob violence
in the state capital, Sittwe, both Arakan and Rohingya witnesses told Human
Rights Watch that government forces stood by while members from each community
attacked the other, razing villages and committing an unknown number of
killings.
“Burmese security forces failed to protect the Arakan and Rohingya from each
other and then unleashed a campaign of violence and mass roundups against the
Rohingya,” said Brad
Adams, Asia director at Human
Rights Watch. “The government claims it is committed to ending ethnic strife
and abuse, but recent events in Arakan
State demonstrate that
state-sponsored persecution and discrimination persist.”
The Burmese government should take urgent measures to end abuses by their
forces, ensure humanitarian access, and permit independent international
monitors to visit affected areas and investigate abuses, Human Rights Watch
said.
The “Government Could Have Stopped This,” is based on 57 interviews conducted
in June and July with affected Arakan, Rohingya, and others in Burma and in Bangladesh,
where Rohingya have sought refuge from the violence and abuses.
The violence erupted in early June after reports circulated that on May 28 an
Arakan Buddhist woman was raped and killed in the town of Ramri by three Muslim men. Details of the
crime were circulated locally in an incendiary pamphlet, and on June 3 a large
group of Arakan villagers in Toungop stopped a bus and brutally killed 10
Muslims on board. Human Rights Watch confirmed that nearby local police and
army stood by and watched but did not intervene. In retaliation, on June 8 thousands
of Rohingya rioted in Maungdaw town after Friday prayers, killed an unknown
number of Arakan, and destroyed considerable Arakan property. Violence between
Rohingya and Arakan then swept through Sittwe and surrounding areas.
Marauding mobs from both Arakan and Rohingya communities stormed unsuspecting
villages and neighborhoods, brutally killed residents, and destroyed and burned
homes, shops, and houses of worship. With little to no government security
present to stop the violence, people armed themselves with swords, spears,
sticks, iron rods, knives, and other basic weaponry. Inflammatory anti-Muslim
media accounts and local propaganda fanned the violence. Numerous Arakan and
Rohingya who spoke to Human Rights Watch reached the conclusion that the authorities
could have prevented the violence and the ensuing abuses could have been
avoided.
A 29-year-old Arakan man and an older Rohingya man each told Human Rights
Watch, separately but in the same words, “The government could have stopped
this.”
The Burmese army’s presence in Sittwe eventually stemmed the violence. However,
on June 12, Arakan mobs burned down the homes of up to 10,000 Rohingya and
non-Rohingya Muslims in the city’s largest Muslim neighborhood while the police
and paramilitary Lon Thein forces opened fire on Rohingya with live ammunition.
A Rohingya man in Sittwe, 36, told Human Rights Watch that an Arakan mob
“started torching the houses. When the people tried to put out the fires, the
paramilitary shot at us. And the group beat people with big sticks.” Another
Rohingya man from the same neighborhood said, “I was just a few feet away. I
was on the road. I saw them shoot at least six people – one woman, two
children, and three men. The police took their bodies away.”
In Sittwe, where the population was about half Arakan and half Muslim, most
Muslims have fled the city or were forcibly relocated, raising questions about
whether the government will respect their right to return home. Human Rights
Watch found the center of the once diverse capital now largely segregated and
devoid of Muslims.
In northern Arakan
State , the army, police,
Nasaka border guard forces, and Lon Thein paramilitaries have committed
killings, mass arrests, and other abuses against Rohingya. They have operated
in concert with local Arakan residents to loot food stocks and valuables from
Rohingya homes. Nasaka and soldiers have fired upon crowds of Rohingya
villagers as they attempted to escape the violence, leaving many dead and
wounded.
“If the atrocities in Arakan had happened before the government’s reform
process started, the international reaction would have been swift and strong,”
said Adams . “But the international community
appears to be blinded by a romantic narrative of sweeping change in Burma , signing
new trade deals and lifting sanctions even while the abuses continue.”
Since June, the government has detained hundreds of Rohingya men and boys, who
remain incommunicado. The authorities in northern Arakan State
have a long history of torture and mistreatment of Rohingya detainees, Human
Rights Watch said. In the southern coastal town of Moulmein , 82 fleeing Rohingya were reportedly
arrested in late June and sentenced to one year in prison for violating
immigration laws.
“The Burmese authorities should immediately release details of detained
Rohingya, allow access to family members and humanitarian agencies, and release
anyone not charged with a crime recognized under international law in which
there is credible evidence,” Adams said. “This
is a test case of the government’s stated commitment to reform and protecting
basic rights.”
“We will send them away if any third country would accept them,” he said.
Burmese law and policy discriminate against Rohingya, infringing on their
rights to freedom of movement, education, and employment. Burmese government
officials typically refer to the Rohingya as “Bengali,” “so-called Rohingya,”
or the pejorative “Kalar,” and Rohingya face considerable prejudice from
Burmese society generally, including from longtime democracy advocates and
ethnic minorities who themselves have long faced oppression from the Burmese
state.
has not played an effective role
in monitoring abuses in Arakan
State , Human Rights Watch
said. In a July 11 assessment of the sectarian violence, the commission
reported on no government abuses, claimed all humanitarian needs were being
met, and failed to address Rohingya citizenship and persecution.
“The Burmese government needs to urgently amend its citizenship law to end
official discrimination against the Rohingya,” Adams
said. “President Thein Sein cannot credibly claim to be promoting human rights
while calling for the expulsion of people because of their ethnicity and
religion.”
The sectarian violence has created urgent humanitarian needs for both Arakan
and Rohingya communities, Human Rights Watch said. Local Arakan organizations,
largely supported by domestic contributions, have provided food, clothing,
medicine, and shelter to displaced Arakan. By contrast, the Rohingya
population’s access to markets, food, and work remains dangerous or blocked,
and many have been in hiding for weeks.
The government has restricted access to affected areas, particularly Rohingya
areas, crippling the humanitarian response. United Nations and humanitarian aid
workers have faced arrest as well as threats and intimidation from the local
Arakan population, which perceives the aid agencies as biased toward the
Rohingya. Government restrictions have made some areas, such as villages south
of Maungdaw, inaccessible to humanitarian agencies.
“The authorities should immediately grant unfettered humanitarian access to all
affected populations and begin work to prevent future violence between the
communities,” Adams said. “The government
should assist both communities with property restitution and ensure all of the
displaced can return home and live in safety.”
Since the June violence, thousands of Rohingya have fled to neighboring Bangladesh
where they have faced pushbacks from the Bangladeshi government in violation of
international law. Human Rights Watch witnessed Rohingya men, women, and
children who arrived onshore and pleaded for mercy from Bangladesh authorities, only to be pushed back
to sea in barely seaworthy wooden boats during rough monsoon rains, putting
them at grave risk of drowning or starvation at sea or persecution in Burma . It is
unknown how many died in these pushbacks. Those who were able to make it into Bangladesh live
in hiding, with no access to food, shelter, or protection.
“Bangladesh is violating its
international legal obligations by callously pushing asylum seekers in rickety
boats back into the open sea,” Adams said.
The Government Could Have Stopped This: Sectarian Violence and Ensuing Abuses in Burma’s Arakan State is available at:
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2012/08/01/government-could-have-stopped-0
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