One
of the most negative aspects to develop out of the newly democratic and
open society of Burma is the use of freedom of expression and freedom
to gather as a catalyst for ethnic and religious hate mongering.
While ethnic tensions between the Buddhists in Rakhine state and
their Muslim Rohingyan neighbours have been underlying for generations
in both civil society as well as politically, the new open society has
allowed for these tensions to be provoked into riots, violence and the
destruction of Rohingyan villages in and around the capital of Rakhine
state, Sittwe. This has led to a mass exodus of hundreds of thousands of
Rohingya to Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps in outlying
areas.
The Burmese government has done little to quell the violence or
to set up proper support structures within the camps, where conditions
are extremely poor with little access to clean water and enough food as
well. The Rohingya that have stayed in Sittwe are relegated to a
cordoned-off neighbourhood called Aung Mingalar that is also referred to
as "the ghetto." It is controlled by state security forces that do not
let the Rohingyans leave, making it nearly impossible for them to take
part in any kind of commerce. These photos depict the day-to-day
existence of Rohingya living in Sittwe. While the violence towards
Muslims began here, it is now spreading nationwide, spurning a fear of
Buddhist jihad as well as retribution by both domestic and foreign
Muslims.
01. Rohingyan
men pray in a temporary mosque at an IDP camp outside of Sittwe. One of
the first established IDP camps outside of Sittwe. Each longhouse
houses about 10 families.
02. Rohingyan
women amongst their temporary homes. Many of those seeking refuge do
not gain access to official aid from the government or NGOs.
03. A Rohingyan couple eat on the floor of their temporary shelter.
04. A Rohingyan woman crosses a flooded area of an IDP camp outside of Sittwe.
05. A Rohingyan man cleanses himself before prayers at an IDP camp outside of Sittwe.
06. A
Rakhine police patrol runs a drill in a Rohingyan IDP camp. Tensions
are high between the security forces and those living in the camps.
07. A
Rohingyan man shot by Rakhine police writhes in pain as his wife fans
him while waiting for medical attention at an underserviced clinic in
the Rohingyan IDP camps.
08. A
woman and her child walk toward a barricade in the Muslim quarter of
Sittwe. Rakhine people are allowed to pass through the area, but the
Rohingyans are confined within the "ghettoo".
09. Rohingyans
in Aung Minglar, the Muslim quarter of Sittwe, reach for aid handouts
of sweet milk for the celebration of the Muslim holiday Eid.
10. A policeman at a checkpoint of the Muslim "ghetto" of Aung Minglar in Sittwe tries to restrict photography. Although
11. Burma is making claims of freedom of press and information, much of the old restrictions remain in place for journalists.
Andrew
Stanbridge has been travelling and photographing throughout Southeast
Asia for the past ten years. With a vested interest in conflict and its
aftermath, Stanbridge focuses on the stories of rehabilitation that are
often ignored by the mainstream media. His work has been supported by
grants and exhibited and published all over the world. He holds a Master
of Fine Arts from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and
Tufts University, and continues to lecture at universities about the
aftermath of war. In 2002, Stanbridge spent a year in Chiang Mai on a
Fulbright scholarship working on a photography project about the
modernisation of Thailand using handmade cameras, polaroid film and
digital technologies. This series of photos will be used for the Wall
Steet Journal, Vice, The Beast and NBC. www.andrewstanbridge.com
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by Andrew Stanbridge
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Sunday, 1 September 2013
NO PLACE TO CALL HOME
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