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
    Rohingya Villagers Forced into Unpaid Labor in Maungdaw
    April 18, 2026
    Nearly 900 Rohingya Dead or Missing at Sea in 2025: UN
    April 17, 2026
    11 Rohingya Arrested by Myanmar Navy in Ayeyarwady Region
    April 17, 2026
    When Fever Spreads Quietly: Measles Threatens Rohingya Children in the Camps
    April 16, 2026
  • World
    WorldShow More
    Nearly 900 Rohingya Dead or Missing at Sea in 2025: UN
    April 17, 2026
    At Least 250 Missing After Boat Sinks in Andaman Sea
    April 15, 2026
    WFP Introduces New Food Support System for Rohingya Refugees
    April 2, 2026
    Qatar Charity and UNHCR Strengthen Partnership to Support Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh
    January 21, 2026
    Myanmar Faces Rohingya Genocide Case at World Court: What You Need to Know
    January 14, 2026
  • 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
    Death at Sea Is Not a Choice: The Rohingya Crisis of Containment
    April 11, 2026
    Witnessing the Rohingya Genocide: A Field Diary from Cox’s Bazar
    April 10, 2026
    Recorded, Restricted, Excluded: How Documentation Controls the Rohingya
    April 6, 2026
    Donor Fatigue and the Economics of the Rohingya Crisis
    March 24, 2026
    Rethinking GBV in Rohingya Camps: From Silence to Systems
    March 20, 2026
  • Features
    FeaturesShow More
    Rohingya Refugees Risking Death at Sea: A Crisis Driven by Protection Gaps, Poverty, and Desperation
    April 16, 2026
    When Fever Spreads Quietly: Measles Threatens Rohingya Children in the Camps
    April 16, 2026
    Rohingya Voices Etched in Stone: A Community’s Stand for Memory, Dignity, and Justice
    April 14, 2026
    A System Built from Absence: Rohingya Refugees Create Their Own Examination Board
    April 14, 2026
    Struggling for Survival: The Story of Mohammed Younus in Cox’s Bazar Camp
    April 8, 2026
  • Election
  • Contact
  • MORE
    • Library
    • Human Trafficking
    • Memoriam
    • Missing Person
    • Covid-19
    • Coup 2021
    • Audio News
    • Repatriation Timeline
Reading: Rohingya forced to fight alongside Myanmar army tormentors
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 > Rohingya forced to fight alongside Myanmar army tormentors
Rohingya News

Rohingya forced to fight alongside Myanmar army tormentors

Last updated: May 29, 2024 5:41 AM
RK News Desk
Published: May 29, 2024
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE

From-AFP

Rohingya mother Sofura Begum has spent years in a squalid refugee camp after fleeing Myanmar. Now her teenage son has been taken to fight alongside the troops that put her there.

Militant Rohingya groups in Bangladesh have forcibly recruited hundreds of young Rohingya men and boys to battle the Arakan Army, a rebel outfit in neighbouring Myanmar that has won a string of victories against the junta there.

Those sent to fight are making common cause with the military that drove 750,000 members of the persecuted Muslim minority from their homes and into Bangladesh in a 2017 crackdown now the subject of an ongoing UN genocide court case.

In their recruitment drive, militants say Rohingya need to ally with old enemies in the Myanmar army to face a new threat.

But the families of those dragooned into combat say that their relatives were not given a choice.

“They told us to hand him over,” Begum, 30, told AFP after her 15-year-old son Abdul was picked up by armed men from her home.

“They threatened us… They said it’s our war of faith. I didn’t want my son to join the war. But we are in a dangerous situation.”

AFP spoke with six families who said men from their household had been forcibly recruited by three Rohingya armed groups with an established presence in the refugee camps.

One man, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution, said his 20-year-old son had been taken by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) and sent across the border to fight.

“I learned that he was injured in the war,” the man said.

“It’s shameful my son was forcibly recruited… Every day our people are being picked up.”

– ‘Slaughtered our people’ –

Myanmar’s military has lost vast swathes of territory this year to an advance by the Arakan Army, one of several rebel groups battling the junta that took power in a 2021 coup.

The Arakan Army says it is fighting for more autonomy for the ethnic Rakhine population in the state, which is also home to around 600,000 Rohingya who remained after the 2017 crackdown.

This month the rebel outfit took control of Buthidaung, a Rohingya-majority town not far from Bangladesh.

Several Rohingya diaspora groups said in a statement that fighters forced Rohingya to flee, then looted and burned their homes — claims the Arakan Army called “propaganda”.

Another armed group in the Bangladesh camps, the Rohingya Solidarity Organisation (RSO), said it had recruited refugees to fight.

“The Arakan Army has tortured and slaughtered our people,” Ko Ko Linn, the RSO’s political chief, told AFP.

“Their only policy is the extermination of the Rohingya community,” he added. “So we are recruiting Rohingyas regularly, giving them military training.”

Ko Ko Linn would not say if other groups had forcibly recruited people.

But Arakan Army spokesperson Khaing Thu Kha accused three groups — RSO, ARSA and the Arakan Rohingya Army (ARA) — of recruiting Rohingya from Bangladesh.

He said the conscripts were taken for training in a Myanmar army base, before “fighting alongside” the junta’s forces.

With mobile and internet networks down across swathes of Rakhine state it is difficult to assess how any cooperation between Rohingya groups and the junta is playing out on the battlefield.

– ‘Lied from the beginning’ –

A senior UN staffer and a rights group official, both speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the subject, said Rohingya armed groups had recruited “hundreds” of refugees in Bangladesh.

Rohingya armed groups working in concert with the military have recruited hundreds more men and boys in Myanmar itself.

Myanmar officially regards the Rohingya as interlopers from Bangladesh, despite roots in the country stretching back centuries.

Successive governments there have subjected the minority to decades of persecution, including a 2015 decision to cease recognising their citizenship.

Thomas Kean of the International Crisis Group think tank told AFP that children as young as 14 had been pressed into battle against their will.

But he added that it appeared a small number of Rohingya had signed on to fight voluntarily after being promised “wages and even citizenship” by Myanmar’s junta.

After significant battlefield losses against rebel groups since last year, Myanmar’s junta activated a dormant conscription law in February to bolster its armed forces.

One Rohingya man in Buthidaung, who asked not to be identified, told AFP his brother had been “beaten and abducted by ARSA” and taken to serve alongside the military.

He said that the junta’s representatives had said at first that the recruits were being trained as a militia to defend Rohingya villages.

“But later, they began using them on the battlefields,” he added. “The junta lied from the beginning.”

Maungdaw meet calls for govt to deny Rohingyas citizenship
Unknown Rohingya Mass killed by Drone
Rohingya families were evacuated to safeguard from reservoir flooding
‘Wherever we go, bombs are falling from the sky like rain’
EU announces 3 million euro aid for Rohingyas in Bhasanchar
TAGGED:RohingyaRohingya crisisRohingya Refugee
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Facebook

Latest News

Rohingya Villagers Forced into Unpaid Labor in Maungdaw
Arakan Army Myanmar Rohingya News
Nearly 900 Rohingya Dead or Missing at Sea in 2025: UN
Human Trafficking Rohingya News United Nations
11 Rohingya Arrested by Myanmar Navy in Ayeyarwady Region
Myanmar Rohingya News SAC
Rohingya Refugees Risking Death at Sea: A Crisis Driven by Protection Gaps, Poverty, and Desperation
Features Human Trafficking
When Fever Spreads Quietly: Measles Threatens Rohingya Children in the Camps
Bangladesh Camp Watch Features
Rohingya Family Flees to Bangladesh After Receiving Order from Arakan Army
Arakan Army Bangladesh Myanmar Rohingya News

Recent Comments

  • Md Tarek on WFP Revises Food Assistance for Rohingya Refugees from April 2026
  • Ro Kareem Bezema on Qatar Charity and UNHCR Strengthen Partnership to Support Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh
  • 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
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?