By Anbarasan Ethirajan BBC News, Teknaf, near Bangladesh-Burma border
Zohara Khatun says she and her family ran for their lives - her father was killed
Zohara Khatun is still reeling from the trauma of seeing her father killed in western Burma in June.
"My father was shot dead by the
Burmese military in front me. Our entire village was destroyed. We ran
for our lives. I still don't know what happened to my mother," she said,
sitting in a thatched hut in a fishing village near the town of Teknaf
in south-eastern Bangladesh.
Ms Khatun is one of the Rohingya
Muslims who have managed to cross into Bangladesh following the
communal unrest in western Burma's Rakhine province.
The 30-year old broke down repeatedly as she tried to explain what happened over the border.
She says their village came
under attack during clashes between majority Buddhists and local
Muslims, mostly from the Rohingya minority. Nearly 80 people were killed
in the fighting and thousands were displaced.
Human rights groups allege that
Burmese security forces continue to carry out mass arrests, forcing many
Rohingya Muslims to flee. A state of emergency declared last month is
still in force in many places of the province. Unwanted
There is no independent
confirmation of the claims of extra-judicial killings and other abuses -
journalists are denied access to the area. Burma denies its security
forces are responsible for human rights abuses.
Since the June clashes,
thousands of refugees have been trying to get into Bangladesh, taking
perilous boat journeys along the Bay of Bengal and across the river Naf,
which separates the two countries.
"We were floating on water for six days. I could not feed my children for days," Ms Khatun said.
"When we tried to reach Bangladesh, we were not allowed to enter. We did not know where to go."
There are an estimated 800,000
Rohingya Muslims living in western Burma. The Burmese authorities argue
that the Rohingyas are recent migrants from the Indian sub-continent.
But Dhaka says they belong to
Burma, so they are not welcome in Bangladesh either. Dhaka says there
are already 400,000 Rohingyas living inside the country, most of them,
it says illegally.
Bangladesh has pushed nearly 1,500 Rohingya Muslims back into Burma since June saying it cannot afford to help them.
Some - like the family of Zohara
Khatun - have managed to get in. The Rohingyas who came recently have
been living in hiding among Bangladeshi villagers. They are afraid that
if the authorities come to know about them they will be sent back to
Burma immediately.
Bangladeshi authorities say they are determined to stop the latest influx.
Lt Col Zahid Hasan of the
Bangladeshi border guards showed me how his men have been patrolling the
river Naf to prevent Rohingyas from crossing into the country.
"It is really putting a direct
effect on our social stability as well as the economy. If this influx
continues then the problem of stability will be at stake," Col Hasan
said.
"Sometimes these Rohingya people
are involved in drug trafficking, human trafficking and other
anti-social activities which are really affecting the social stability
in this area."
The Rohingyas deny such allegations. 'We belong to Burma'
The refugees I spoke to accused Burmese security forces of turning a blind eye when their villages came under attack.
Sayeda Begum now has no husband and her children no father
"My husband was killed in the
riots. The Burmese police were shooting only at the Muslims, not the
Buddhists. The military was just watching from the rooftop and they did
not intervene," said Sayeda Begum, another Rohingya Muslim woman.
Rohingya Muslims have flocked to Bangladesh over the past 30 years, bringing with them tales of oppression and exclusion.
They are denied citizenship and
land rights in Burma. Human rights groups say they are among the most
persecuted minorities in the world.
But Bangladesh's refusal to allow in the recent wave of refugees has also attracted criticism.
"We understand it is not that
easy. So we advocate with the government of Bangladesh to give at least
temporary protection status to those arriving from Rakhine state of
Myanmar [Burma]," said Dirk Hebecker, a senior official from the UN
Refugee Agency in the Bangladeshi town of Cox's Bazaar.
The Rohingyas who crossed into
Bangladesh in the past three decades have been living in camps along the
border. The unofficial refugee camps have no running water, drainage or
health facilities. The Rohingyas live in abject poverty and squalor in
these camps.
Conditions in the unofficial Rohingya refugee camps are squalid
The recent statement by Burmese
President Thein Sein that the Rohingyas should be resettled in a third
country has also added to the anxiety of Rohingya refugees in
Bangladesh.
"We are concerned by the
president's comments. We belong to Burma and we want to go back to our
villages. It is difficult to live in refugee camps like this," said
Ahmed Hossain, a Rohingya community leader in Kutupalong camp, near
Cox's Bazaar.
"We are willing to go back to Burma only if our security and rights are guaranteed."
For years, Bangladesh has been
urging the Burmese authorities to take back the Rohingya refugees living
in various camps but without much success.
The latest crisis comes at a
time when Burma is gradually moving towards democracy. But many here in
Bangladesh argue that the process may not be complete unless the
Rohingya issue is resolved.
Sources Here
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