The
men who abducted the boy struck him with the butt of a rifle until he
fell to the dirt path, she said in an interview, gesturing with a sweep
of her slender arms. Terrified, she fled into the rice fields. She
assumes he is dead.
Three doors away, Zoya, dressed in a black abaya, showed the latch on her front door
that she said armed men had broken as they stormed in and began beating
her 14-year-old son, Mohamed. She has not seen him since.
The villagers’ accounts back up a United Nations investigation, which concluded that the attack on Du Chee Yar Tan that night resulted in the deaths of at least 40 men, women and children,
one of the worst instances of violence against the country’s
long-persecuted Rohingya Muslims. They were killed, the United Nations
says, by local security forces and civilians of the rival Rakhine ethnic
group, many of them adherents of an extreme Buddhist ideology who were
angered by the kidnapping of a Rakhine policeman by some Rohingya men.
Myanmar’s
government, intent on international acceptance and investment, has
steadfastly denied the killings occurred in the village, a collection of
hamlets spread across luxuriant rice fields close to Bangladesh and a
five-hour ferry ride up the languid Kaladan River from the state
capital, Sittwe. The country’s human rights commission called the news “unverifiable and unconfirmed.”
The
United Nations findings, however, have become emblematic of the
increasing violence against Myanmar’s Rohingya, an estimated 1.3 million
people who are denied citizenship under national law.
The world organization’s report — presented to the government by the United Nations and United States
but not made public — documents the initial discovery of the massacre
by five Muslim men who sneaked into the area after the attack. They
found the severed heads of at least 10 Rohingya bobbing in a water tank.
Some of those were children’s.
One
of the men said he was so rattled, and concerned his eyes were playing
tricks in the darkness, that he put his hands in the tank to confirm
through touch what he thought he saw.
The
killings are a test for Myanmar’s government, which has done little to
rein in radical Buddhists, even as it pursues broad economic and
political reforms of policies created by its former military leaders.
The government has backed severe restrictions imposed by local
authorities on Muslims’ freedom of movement and deprivation of basic
services in Rakhine State, where most Rohingya live.
The
bloodletting is also a challenge for Western governments that have
showered economic aid and good will on Myanmar in the hope of winning
the fealty of the resource-rich fledgling democracy. Those countries
have mostly kept their concerns about the treatment of the Rohingya
quiet in the hope, diplomats said, of persuading the government to
change its stance.
On Friday, the crackdown on the ethnic minority continued, when the government ordered Doctors Without Borders,
the Rohingya’s main health care provider, to stop providing its
services to them. One of the group’s offenses, according to a government
official, was the hiring of too many Rohingya.
Since
2012, many Rohingya, a long-reviled group in Buddhist-majority Myanmar,
have been herded into miserable camps they are not allowed to leave,
even for work. Those still allowed to live in villages like Du Chee Yar
Tan are at the mercy of the local authorities, many of whom are inspired
by an extremist Buddhist group whose monks have used the nation’s new
freedoms to travel the countryside on motorbikes preaching hatred of
Muslims.
The
latest carnage is a major embarrassment for the government, which has
just assumed an important position as the annual chair of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
In
a sign of the sensitivity, a visit to the village to assess the
conflicting reports about the night of Jan. 13 was cut short when local
police officers briefly detained two New York Times reporters and a
photographer.
In
response to a major 2012 spasm of violence in Sittwe that included the
firebombing of homes and left an estimated 300 dead, most of them
Muslims, President Thein Sein
said most Rohingya were in Myanmar illegally, despite their having
lived there, in some cases, for generations. His solution: The United
Nations should help deport them.
Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel peace laureate and opposition leader, is
rarely asked at home about discrimination against the Rohingya because
it is broadly accepted in Myanmar.
She
has defended her lack of action to the foreign news media, saying that
taking sides could further exacerbate tensions, an explanation that even
her Western supporters believe is calculated to avoid offending voters
ahead of elections next year.
Though
there have been attacks on other Muslim groups elsewhere in Myanmar in
the past two years, the animosity toward the Rohingya is especially
combustible. Many of them were brought to the country from India in
British colonial times, and many ethnic Burmese despise them as illegal
intruders from what is now Bangladesh.
About
140,000 displaced Rohingya whose homes were destroyed in two major
attacks in 2012 now live in more than two dozen camps around Sittwe, a
dilapidated trading center. Largely dependent on assistance from
international humanitarian groups, which are often harassed by the local
authorities, the Rohingya remain trapped in the camps that foreign aid
workers call the world’s largest outdoor jails.
The
presidential spokesman, U Ye Htut, said in a telephone interview that
plans last year for “resettlement and rehabilitation” of those in the
camps were suspended because the “Bengalis did not agree and threw
stones,” using a term common in Myanmar for the Rohingya, indicating the
belief that they belong in Bangladesh.
Of
the 18 townships in Rakhine State, seven have already barred Muslims
from using their clinics, foreign aid workers said. And a report
released last week by Fortify Rights,
a group that specializes in the Rohingya, chronicled a pattern of
discrimination by officials that is intensifying as local authorities
appear increasingly desperate to drive the group out. A dozen leaked
documents dated from 1993 to 2008 showed the government’s efforts to
slow the growth of the Rohingya population, including a requirement for
official permission to marry and limits on the number of children
couples can have. The presidential spokesman, Mr. Ye Htut, dismissed the
findings as “a one-sided view of the Bengali.”
As
a way out of the bleak camps, nearly 80,000 Rohingya men, women and
children last year took perilous sea journeys run by smugglers to
Thailand and on to Malaysia or north to Bangladesh. Some drowned in
capsized boats, and many were detained in Thailand, said Chris Lewa, the
director of the Arakan Project, a human rights group.
“The risk seems worth it to them,” she said.
Constrained Lives
Muhamed
Fourhkhat, 54, and his family have it better than most in the camps and
the villages around Sittwe. They have managed — in a vastly reduced way
— to replicate the lives they had as the scions of a well-to-do
Rohingya quarter in Sittwe that flourished with markets, a primary
school for Muslim and Buddhist children, a mosque and a monastery.
In
the town, the family lived on the top stories of two concrete buildings
laid with polished teak floors, and worked downstairs at their hardware
business. The land had been passed down through his great-grandfather,
Mr. Fourhkhat said.
The properties were burned by a mob, backed by Rakhine security forces, in June 2012, he said, and bulldozed by the government a few months later. So was every other structure in the neighborhood.
On
a recent day, the neighborhood was an empty stretch of land overgrown
with weeds and littered with plastic bags waving in the wind. An eerie
silence has settled over what, by many accounts, was once a friendly
marketplace that served both Rakhine and Rohingya.
Mr.
Fourhkhat has never returned, though he could probably bribe a police
officer to get there for a short visit. “Why would I?” he asked,
pointing out that his beard, touched with henna, gave him away as a
Muslim. “If I went,” he said, making a cutting gesture across his neck,
“you would find my dead body there.”
He
has built a new, if less sturdy, home of bamboo in a Muslim village
that sits astride the camps inside a security perimeter that is
designated by the Rakhine government as a place Rohingya can live. “I
have never lived in bamboo before,” he said.
Mr.
Fourhkhat’s son, Shwe Maung Thani, 28, is a graduate of Sittwe
University in biology, getting his diploma before the state expelled all
Rohingya students from the school. He has rarely sneaked out of the
camp, but tried twice to get his sick mother to a hospital.
She died in January after receiving inadequate medical care, he said.
The only Rohingya doctor in Rakhine State — Dr. Tun Aung,
trained before a citizenship law in 1982 disqualified Rohingya for
medical school — was jailed after the June 2012 violence. He remains in
prison, convicted of inciting violence, despite requests from the United
States government for his release, an American official said.
A Longtime Fear
The
Rakhine people, a group of about 2.1 million who are fiercely proud of
their ancient kingdom, known as Arakan, are fearful of the Rohingya
based on “an acute sense of demographic besiegement,” according to a recent article
by Kyaw San Wai, a Myanmar citizen who is a senior analyst at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore. It is a feeling
shared by many Buddhists across Myanmar.
Given
the lack of a census since 1983, the demographics are imprecise. It is
generally accepted by Myanmar and international officials that about 89
percent of the roughly 55 million people in Myanmar are Buddhist and 4
percent are Muslim. The Rohingya are a subset of those Muslims, making
the Buddhists’ fear of being overwhelmed seem irrational though it is
nonetheless real, the experts say.
“Among Burmese Buddhists, there is a widespread belief that Buddhism will disappear in the future,” Mr. Wai wrote.
While
there is little chance of Muslims taking over the nation, they are
enough of a presence here in Rakhine to make their presence felt
politically.
In
the 2010 general election, the central government allowed the Rohingya
to vote despite their lack of citizenship, and the results were too
close for comfort, said Khaing Pyi Soe, a senior member of the Rakhine
Nationalities Development Party. The Rakhine candidate in Sittwe won 52
percent of the vote, and the Rohingya candidate 48 percent. Mr. Khaing
Pyi Soe and other officials say the Rohingya must not be allowed to vote
next year because with many young Rakhine leaving the impoverished
region for work elsewhere, the results would be reversed.
In the weeks before the attack on Du Chee Yar Tan, monks from the radical Buddhist movement called 969
visited a town nearby. The monks — who are at least tolerated by the
national government, if not admired by some officials — have stirred
anti-Muslim sentiment throughout parts of Myanmar.
There
was no formal connection between the appearance of the monks and the
killings, experts said, but their hate speech has increasingly infected
the sloganeering of Rakhine civilians. Now, they say, even moderate
Rakhine feel it would be too dangerous to stand up for reconciliation.
The
United Nations and the United States have kept up the pressure on
Myanmar about the killings in Du Chee Yar Tan, and Myanmar’s government,
which has already conducted two fast inquiries, has ordered another and
included a Muslim on the panel, though not a Rohingya Muslim.
One
factor may complicate its investigation: The United Nations report on
the attack said nearby villagers reported that in the hours immediately
afterward, they saw Rakhine security forces ferry 20 bodies to
surrounding hills, probably to cover up the murders. Immediately after
the slaughter, 22 wounded and traumatized villagers sought help at rural
clinics run by Doctors Without Borders, the group said.
Some
were women traumatized by the horrors they witnessed, according to aid
workers familiar with the cases; others sought treatment for wounds.
At
least some villagers have drifted back to check on their belongings.
Zaw Patha, whose son was dragged from the kiosk, found that the goods he
guarded had been looted and her cows stolen.
Red liquid signifying blood was splashed on a school not far from her house, a warning to stay away.
“To
an extent, I understand the worry of the Rakhine about Rohingya
population growth in an area next to Bangladesh,” said the international
aid worker. “But at the same time, you can’t get rid of 1.3 million
people.”
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