146,000 HAVE NOW FLED MYANMAR
VIOLENCE SAYS UNITED NATIONS
KUTUPALONG, BANGLADESH: The
Latest on violence in Myanmar's Rakhine state and the flood of ethnic Rohingya
refugees into Bangladesh. The United Nations says some 146,000 people have fled
Myanmar into Bangladesh since violence erupted there August 25, 2017. U.N.
spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Wednesday from the U.N. that the World Food
Program is appealing for $11.3 million to support the influx of people and
those already living in camps. The U.N. agency has provided food to tens of
thousands of people, with Dujarric describing women and children arriving there
as "hungry and malnourished."
Rohingya Muslims have been
fleeing since insurgent attacks against border police and other government
troops on August 25, 2017 sparked retaliation by Myanmar soldiers. The army and police
have been accused of firing indiscriminately, but the government says its
forces are making every effort to avoid harming innocent civilians. Dujarric also said U.N. Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres "is continuing his diplomatic contacts regarding the
situation in Myanmar."
The Myanmar government's top
security adviser says an insurgent group that attacked 30 police posts two weeks
ago is trying to carve out a separate Muslim state from the Buddhist-majority
nation, and the armed forces are using maximum restraint in their operations
against them. National Security Adviser Thaung Tun said at a news conference
Wednesday in the capital, Naypyitaw, that security forces are making every
effort to avoid harming innocent civilians. He was responding to accusations
that the army and police fired indiscriminately on civilians and razed Muslim
Rohingya villages after the attacks on the police posts in Rakhine state.
A group calling itself the Arakan
Rohingya Salvation Army has claimed responsibility for the attacks. The
military says hundreds of people died in clashes following the attacks. About
125,000 ethnic minority Rohingya Muslims have fled to neighboring Bangladesh to
escape the violence. Norway's foreign minister says Myanmar's leader, Aung San
Suu Kyi, and her government must allow humanitarian groups to distribute aid in
violence-wracked Rakhine state, calling limits on their work "extremely
serious."
About 125,000 ethnic minority
Rohingya Muslims have fled to neighboring Bangladesh after a military crackdown
in Rakhine. Myanmar says the crackdown is in response to attacks against police
and paramilitary posts. Foreign Minister Borge Brende said Wednesday that the
Norwegian government is deeply concerned about escalating violence and the
deteriorating humanitarian situation of the Rohingya.
He said "all groups must
show restraint," but stressed that "authorities, under the leadership
of Aung San Suu Kyi, have a particular responsibility to protect civilians from
abuses, to stop the violence and to ensure humanitarian access." In a
separate statement, Norway's Refugee Council said "full and unimpeded
access to affected communities" is needed. Officials say Turkish President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan's wife is heading to Bangladesh to oversee the
distribution of aid to Muslim Rohingya refugees from Myanmar and to highlight
the crisis.
Officials from Erdogan's office
said Wednesday that Emine Erdogan will be accompanied by her son, Bilal
Erdogan, the family and social affairs minister, and senior Turkish aid
officials during her visit to Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh. Turkish Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu is also scheduled to depart for Bangladesh and is
expected to visit a refugee camp and oversee the delivery of aid. He said
Wednesday that Turkey wants a lasting solution to the plight of the Rohingya.
About 125,000 ethnic minority
Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh after a military crackdown in Rakhine state
that Myanmar says is a response to attacks against police and paramilitary
posts. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu says his country wants a
lasting solution for the plight of Rohingya Muslim refugees from Myanmar. Cavusoglu
spoke Wednesday in Baku, Azerbaijan, before travelling to Bangladesh where he's
expected to visit a refugee camp for Rohingya and oversee the delivery of
humanitarian aid. He says Turkey will also deliver ambulances to Bangladesh to
help it cope with the refugee flows, Cavusoglu said.
About 125,000 Rohingya have fled
to Bangladesh after a military crackdown in Rakhine state that Myanmar says is
a response to attacks against police and paramilitary posts. Cavusoglu said
Turkey was determined not to "abandon" Rohingya and said his visit
would help determine steps that can be taken to improve their conditions.
He says: "God willing,
together with the international community, a lasting solution can be
found." On Tuesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's spokesman said
authorities in Myanmar agreed to let Turkish officials into Rakhine to provide
food and clothing. Bangladeshi police say a trawler carrying Rohingya Muslims
fleeing Myanmar has capsized in the Bay of Bengal, and at least five people
have drowned.
Police official Yakub Ali said
residents of Shah Porir Island had recovered five bodies from the water on
Wednesday morning, hours after the boat capsized around midnight. Ali said he
believed the boat had been carrying about 35 people when it overturned, but
could not say how many were missing or had made it to shore. Islander Mujibur
Rahman said he had helped recover some of the found bodies and "many more
are feared dead." A Bangladeshi disaster management official says the
country will set up a new camp to accommodate Rohingya Muslims who have arrived
from Myanmar since Aug. 25.
But Shah Kamal of the Ministry of
Disaster Management did not say when the new camp would be ready. He said
Wednesday that the camp would be established in Tyingkhali, south of Cox's
Bazar district and near the established camp in Balukhali where more than
50,000 Rohingya have been sheltering since October. Prime Minister Sheikh
Hasina has asked officials to prepare a database with fingerprints for the new
arrivals. Cox's Bazar official Ali Hossain said the plans were still under
discussion, and the government was coordinating with international agencies to
handle the "very complicated" situation.
He said officials were visiting
the area and, "if necessary, we will take 400 acres or more land for the
new establishment. The Bangladesh government will take responsibility." At
least a thousand protesters led by the hard-line Islamic Defenders Front and
other Muslim groups are demonstrating against Myanmar's persecution of its
Muslim Rohingya minority in the Indonesian capital Jakarta.
The crowd, mostly men dressed in
white and holding a giant banner and flag, has converged on an area of central
Jakarta near Myanmar's Embassy. Police have put on a show of force, blocking
streets around the embassy with vehicles and barriers. Jakarta police spokesman
Argo Yuwono says up to 6,000 personnel are deployed to ensure security. About
125,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh after a military crackdown in Rakhine
state that Myanmar says is a response to attacks against police and
paramilitary posts.
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