By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Rohingya Khobor Rohingya Khobor Rohingya Khobor
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Rohingya
    Rohingya
    Show More
    Top News
    Invitation to the Rohingya youths for Human Rights training
    August 25, 2022
    A poem by a Rohingya refugee: When I was crossing the Naf
    December 13, 2020
    Six Caught Smuggling High-Tech Devices to Myanmar, Suspected Links to Arakan Army
    October 5, 2025
    Latest News
    Five Rohingya Arrested by Military Junta in Sittwe
    January 17, 2026
    AA Forces Rohingya Men and Women in Mingalar Gyi Village to Join Military Service
    January 15, 2026
    Body of Man Found in Teknaf, Police Take Custody
    January 14, 2026
    Rohingya Community Mourns the Passing of Youth Leader Ro Abdur Rahman
    January 13, 2026
  • World
    WorldShow More
    Myanmar Faces Rohingya Genocide Case at World Court: What You Need to Know
    January 14, 2026
    Rohingya Refugee FC Sweeps Friendly Tournament Against UNHCR Staff in Cox’s Bazar
    December 2, 2025
    South Korea Donates $5 Million to Support Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh
    October 22, 2025
    Bangladesh and WFP Seek More Funds to Help Rohingya Refugees
    October 15, 2025
    A Cry for Justice: Voices at the UN High-Level Conference on the Rohingya Crisis
    October 11, 2025
  • Culture
    CultureShow More
    Rohingya Refugees Begin Observing Ramadan Amidst Struggles and Uncertainty
    March 1, 2025
    Arakan Rohingya Cultural Association Hosts Grand Cultural Event to Preserve Heritage
    February 27, 2025
    Shabe Bazar Namay-2 and Inndin Team Advance to Final in Rohingya Football Tournament
    February 25, 2025
    Arakan Rohingya Football Federation Hosts Second Tournament to Inspire Refugee Youth
    February 22, 2025
    Empowering Rohingya Women Through Handcrafting Skills
    December 21, 2024
  • Opinion
    OpinionShow More
    An Election Without a People: Myanmar’s Vote and the Rohingya’s Permanent Exile
    January 17, 2026
    The Refugee Camp as a Border: Why Rohingya Are Trapped Without Leaving
    January 2, 2026
    The Rohingya as Bargaining Chips: How Regional Powers Trade Lives for Influence in the Bay of Bengal
    December 17, 2025
    Erasing a People Twice: How Documentation Wars Decide the Future of the Rohingya
    December 8, 2025
    OPINION | Why Some Rohingya Refugees View Nepal as a Safer Destination
    December 7, 2025
  • Features
    FeaturesShow More
    Public Gathering Marks Myanmar Independence Day, Highlights Rohingya Exclusion and Call for Justice
    January 6, 2026
    The Journey of a Rohingya-Led Art Club
    January 4, 2026
    Dream of a Rohingya Student: From a Community-Led Classroom to the Hope of a University
    December 26, 2025
    A Generation Empowered with Education and Voice Can Reshape the Rohingya Future
    December 17, 2025
    Rohingya Youth Form Environmental Network to Protect Camps from Growing Ecological Crisis
    December 12, 2025
  • Election
  • Contact
  • MORE
    • Library
    • Human Trafficking
    • Memoriam
    • Missing Person
    • Covid-19
    • Coup 2021
    • Audio News
    • Repatriation Timeline
Reading: Rights group claims Myanmar’s Rohingya being targeted in ethnic cleansing  
Share
Font ResizerAa
Rohingya Khobor Rohingya Khobor
  • Home
  • Rohingya
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Election
  • Contact
  • MORE
Search RK
  • Home
  • Rohingya
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Election
  • Contact
  • MORE
    • Library
    • Human Trafficking
    • Memoriam
    • Missing Person
    • Covid-19
    • Coup 2021
    • Audio News
    • Repatriation Timeline
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Rohingya Khobor > Rohingya News > Rights group claims Myanmar’s Rohingya being targeted in ethnic cleansing  
Rohingya News

Rights group claims Myanmar’s Rohingya being targeted in ethnic cleansing  

Last updated: August 16, 2024 4:51 PM
RK News Desk
Published: August 16, 2024
Share
9 Min Read
SHARE

By Shaikh Azizur Rahman (voanews)

Myanmar’s Rohingya ethnic minority, victims of a brutal campaign of mass slaughter and persecution by the nation’s military in 2016, is again being subjected to a wave of deadly ethnic cleansing, according to survivors and human rights groups.

This time, though, the perpetrators are said to be the Arakan Army, one of several ethnic groups fighting the nation’s ruling junta, as well as by their former military persecutors.

“Ethnic Rohingya and Rakhine civilians are bearing the brunt of the atrocities that the Myanmar military and opposition Arakan Army are committing,” Elaine Pearson, Asia director of Human Rights Watch, said in a report this week that accused both the AA and junta forces of “extrajudicial killings and widespread arson against Rohingya” and other civilians.

“Both sides are using hate speech, attacks on civilians, and massive arson to drive people from their homes and villages, raising the specter of ethnic cleansing,” she said.

In one of the most recent incidents, disputed by the Arakan Army, scores of Muslim Rohingya, including many young children, were reported to have been killed in an AA drone and artillery strike while attempting to flee Myanmar on August 5, according to Rohingya rights activists who have spoken to some of the survivors.

Aiming to escape violence in Rakhine state’s Maungdaw township, the Rohingya families were on the bank of the Naf River waiting for a chance to cross over to Bangladesh when they were targeted by the Arakan Army, according to the activists.

On the same day, a boat carrying some Rohingya across the river to Bangladesh reportedly faced an AA drone attack. Two other overloaded boats carrying scores of fleeing Rohingya are said to have capsized, leaving most of the passengers to drown.

Altogether more than 200 Rohingya died as a consequence of the AA attacks, according to witness accounts related to VOA by Rohingya rights activists.

Social media images, apparently shot soon after the incident, showed bodies of men, women and children strewn along the bank of the river that marks the border between the two countries.

VOA has not independently verified the images but Bangladeshi government officials said August 8 that they had found at least 34 bodies floating in the Naf River near its Shahpori Island. They were believed to be some of those who had died in the alleged AA attack three days earlier.

The United League of Arakan/Arakan Army denied the incident in an August 7 statement.

In its English translation of the statement, the Arakan group expressed regret that “many Muslims” fleeing Maungdaw had “reportedly died from artillery or small arms fire, bombings, drownings, airstrikes, or massive explosions near the coast of Maungdaw, causing great distress.”

“We respectfully announce that these deaths did not occur in areas under our control and are not related to our organization,” the statement said, adding, “We are investigating the details of these incidents and will promptly release information as soon as we have verified the facts.”

Rohingya activist Nay San Lwin, co-founder of the Free Rohingya Coalition, told VOA Thursday that the AA has been violently targeting Rohingya villages since April, torching thousands of homes and making hundreds of thousands of people homeless.

“In June, the AA began violently targeting Rohingya in Maungdaw township. Over the past weeks, they dropped drone bombs and fired artilleries on the Rohingya villages. When the attacks began increasing, Rohingya decided to flee to Bangladesh. Now, the AA is targeting the Rohingyas who are fleeing for life, too” said Lwin, who said he had spoken to many witnesses from Maungdaw.

“In Maungdaw, the AA killed at least 400 Rohingya, including children and women, in the past weeks. On the afternoon of August 5, the AA dropped dozens of bombs on the bank of Naf and a boat, massacring over 200 Rohingya,” Lwin said.

For more than 50 years, minority Rohingya Muslims have fled to neighboring countries, including Bangladesh, to escape persecution and discrimination in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.

Myanmar has been engulfed in a bloody civil war that has claimed the lives of thousands of civilians since 2021, when the country’s military seized power through a coup. In recent months, a coalition of ethnic rebel forces, including the AA, has escalated their offensive to oust the junta, which has been ejected from vast areas in Shan, Chin and Rakhine states.

While launching their offensive against the junta forces, the AA leadership expressed a commitment to respect Rohingya human rights, activist Lwin said.

“The Rohingya community then believed that, unlike the Myanmar military, the AA would not attack them. But in recent months, while taking control of vast areas of Rakhine, the rebel group began violently targeting the Rohingya,” Lwin said.

“In Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships, where most Rohingya are concentrated, the AA rebels burnt villages, looted houses and carried out massacres. In April – May, the rebels killed around 2,100 Rohingya in Buthidaung. In a horrific massacre, on May 2, the AA killed 600 Rohingya, including women and children, in Htan Shauk Khan village of Buthidaung.”

According to the Free Rohingya Coalition, over 250,000 Rohingya have been made homeless in Buthidaung and Maungdaw since April.

Fortify Rights, an international human rights group based in Southeast Asia, says it has documented killings and arson by the AA in Rohingya villages in Rakhine.

“In Buthidaung and Maungdaw, Rohingya are left to survive in fields and rural areas without adequate shelter, food, health care, and hygiene facilities, after their homes were destroyed by junta attacks and razed by the AA,” said Ejaz Min Khant, a human rights associate at Fortify Rights.

Khant told VOA on Thursday that humanitarian NGOs and U.N. agencies are barely functioning in Rakhine, leaving the Rohingya in a desperate situation. Many have fled to Bangladesh seeking safety, he said.

“The Arakan Army has positioned itself near Rohingya villages, drawing junta attacks, and has been involved in indiscriminate attacks on civilians, forced labor, forced recruitment, and movement restrictions against Rohingya.”

Fortify Rights Director John Quinley said his group has seen an increase in human rights violations against the Rohingya since November.

“Although the AA has taken control of large parts of Rakhine state from the Myanmar junta, they are acting like a perpetrator of violence, not a revolutionary armed group trying to uphold human rights and democracy,” he told VOA.

Noor Hossain, a Rohingya teacher in the sprawling refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, said that the AA is trying to “erase the Rohingya’s long-standing identity, land, and homes, to subjugate the community as slaves.”

“Rakhine has become a graveyard for Rohingyas. The AA is targeting us violently the way the Myanmar military has done for many years. It will be extremely difficult for us to live there in the future, as there is no guarantee of safety for any Rohingya under the control of Rakhine people or the AA,” Hossain told VOA.

“Unless the international community intervenes and reins in the AA immediately, no Rohingya will be able to live in Myanmar in the near future.”

Rohingya Teacher Abducted by Arakan Army in Buthidaung Township
Rohingya Crisis Deepens Amid Conflicting Powers and Human Rights Violations in Rakhine State
Five Rohingya Arrested by Military Junta in Sittwe
20 Rohingya Refugee test positive at Jammu, India
SOS from Zero Point Rohingya refugee camp
TAGGED:#RohingyaRohingya crisisRohingya Refugee
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Facebook

Latest News

An Election Without a People: Myanmar’s Vote and the Rohingya’s Permanent Exile
Op-ed
Rakhine State Chief Minister Meets Islamic Religious Leaders in Sittwe
Arakan Army Myanmar
AA Forces Rohingya in Maungdaw to Join Military Twice in One Day
Arakan Army Myanmar
AA Forces Rohingya Men and Women in Mingalar Gyi Village to Join Military Service
Arakan Army Myanmar Rohingya News
Body of Man Found in Teknaf, Police Take Custody
Camp Watch Rohingya News
Myanmar Faces Rohingya Genocide Case at World Court: What You Need to Know
Myanmar The World

Recent Comments

  • Yasin on Rohingya Youth Form Environmental Network to Protect Camps from Growing Ecological Crisis
  • Abdu Hamid on The Story of Bright Future Academy: A Center of Hope for Rohingya Students
  • khan on Rohingya Community Holds Peaceful Gathering Ahead of UN Conference
  • Abdur Rahman on Bangladesh Hosts International Conference to Address Rohingya Crisis
  • Aziz Jamal on Awakening a Silenced Soul: The Story of ARCA and Rohingya Cultural Revival
FAIR USE NOTICE: This site may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. This material is distributed without profit. DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in the articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the organisation. © 2017 - 2024 Rohingya Khobor
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?