Myanmar: 2,000 Rohingya mass on Myanmar coast to join exodus
Over 2,000
Rohingya have massed along Myanmar's coast this week after trekking from inland
villages in Rakhine state to join the refugee exodus to Bangladesh, state media
reported Saturday.
The refugees
follow more than half a million fellow Rohingya who have emptied out of
northern Rakhine in a single month, fleeing an army crackdown and communal
violence the UN says amounts to "ethnic cleansing".
The journey
to Bangladesh is fraught with danger for the stateless Muslim minority, who
have faced decades of systematic oppression in mainly Buddhist Myanmar.
After
fleeing burning villages they say were set alight by soldiers and Buddhist
mobs, more than one hundred Rohingya have drowned in the scramble to cross the
Naf river that divides the two countries.
The latest
boat capsize on Thursday has left some 60 feared dead, with 23 bodies -- mainly
of children -- brought to shore as dozens more remain missing.
The crowds
building up along Rakhine's coast hail from the same inland area -- Buthidaung
township, west of the Mayu mountain range -- as many of those who perished in
the boat tragedy.
"Starting
on Tuesday, they left their region, claiming that they felt insecure to remain
because they were now living in a sparsely populated area, as most of their
relatives had left for Bangladesh," the state-run Global New Light of
Myanmar reported.
More than
half had gathered on a beach near Lay Yin Kwin village, the report said, with
photos of women and children clustered together on the sand as security
officers looked on.
It was not
clear if or how they would complete the journey to Bangladesh, where the
unprecedented influx of refugees has unfurled a separate humanitarian crisis as
aid groups struggle to meet their vast needs.
The report
said officials tried to assure the Rohingya of their safety in Myanmar but
villagers said they "would still like to go to Bangladesh of their own
accord."
The UN has
previously reported that increasingly isolated Muslim communities in Rakhine
are receiving regular threats from local Rakhine Buddhists to leave the area.
They have
also been cut off from crucial humanitarian aid since August 25, when Rohingya
militant raids triggered the military backlash that plunged the region into
crisis.
Myanmar
denies ethnic cleansing is under way and instead blames Rohingya militants for
the violence, which has also displaced tens of thousands of ethnic Rakhine
Buddhists and Hindus.
The unrest
has inflamed already blistering religious tensions and fuelled a dizzying array
of claims and counterclaims from different ethnic groups.
The Muslim
Rohingya have been the target of especially acute loathing in Myanmar, where
they are denied citizenship and are instead branded "Bengalis" -- or
illegal migrants who do not belong in the Buddhist-majority country.
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