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
    Fire Breaks Out in Camp-2W Early Morning
    April 19, 2026
    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
  • 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
    From Insurgency to Governance: How the Arakan Army is Reordering Rohingya Life
    April 19, 2026
    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
  • 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 Refugees in Bangladesh Pressured to Join Myanmar’s Civil War
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 > Myanmar > Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh Pressured to Join Myanmar’s Civil War
Myanmar

Rohingya Refugees in Bangladesh Pressured to Join Myanmar’s Civil War

Last updated: June 23, 2024 4:45 PM
RK News Desk
Published: June 23, 2024
Share
11 Min Read
SHARE

Rohingya youth in refugee camps in Bangladesh face intimidation and forced recruitment by gangs, coercing them to join the very army that uprooted them.

By Dayna Santana Pérez (thediplomat.com)

Contents
  • Rohingya youth in refugee camps in Bangladesh face intimidation and forced recruitment by gangs, coercing them to join the very army that uprooted them.
    • Dayna Santana Pérez

After the midday prayers on a hot Wednesday, Hussain* was summoned by an armed group to a “community meeting” in his block within the world’s largest refugee settlement.

“They want us to go and fight in Myanmar,” Hussain said. “They are gathering all the young men in the Rohingya community and forcing them to join the Myanmar military against the Arakan Army.”

“We don’t want to go, but they are threatening us daily. It is more terrifying than ever to be in camp right now.”

Since May 15, armed Rohingya nationalist groups have been holding community meetings throughout the 33-camp refugee settlement in Bangladesh, intensifying efforts to recruit young Rohingya males for military service in Myanmar, targeting boys as young as 14.

“The situation deteriorates by the day,” said Mahmudul*, a Rohingya humanitarian worker living in Kutupalong Camp. 

“The gang conducts arrests around the clock, targeting anyone, particularly volunteer workers from our community, such as teachers and humanitarian aid workers. They have been organizing meetings in every camp for this purpose.”

Since 2021, following the military’s seizure of power through a coup, Myanmar has been embroiled in a brutal civil war, resulting in the loss of thousands of civilian lives. As 2023 saw a steady increase in fighting between the military junta and ethnic armed groups and resistance forces, the Myanmar junta has sought recruits from the Rohingya population it has persecuted and denied citizenship to for decades. 

“Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh, already facing immense hardship, are now targeted for forced recruitment by the military through their proxies,” said Htway Lwin, a Rohingya human rights activist and community leader based in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.

Several young men have fled the camp to evade recruitment, while others have relocated to the shelters of family and friends located in the Registered Refugee Camp settlement, which is purportedly facing fewer gang-related activities.

“Women and men stay awake at night, remaining alert as they fear their sons will be taken and forced to fight in Myanmar,” said Mohammed Younus* of Camp 4. 

The Diplomat documented four cases of forced recruitment and interviewed 19 Rohingya residents of Kutupalong Camp in Bangladesh. Family members of those recruited reported that their loved ones were taken from the camp and transported to Rakhine State. Similar accounts of forced recruitment have been documented by AFP.

One brother of a recruited young male shared that he has been in contact with his brother, who says he has started military training in Rakhine State to fight against the Arakan Army. 

“There are many people whose family members were taken forcibly and still there is no news of them. Their parents have been looking for them everywhere but there is no news,” said Kyaw Myint Aung* of Camp 4.

“Some say that they are now in Myanmar and undergoing military training. Others say they are in the Bandarban district of Bangladesh, near the border with Myanmar.”

Over 500 Rohingya refugees have reportedly been pressured by armed groups to join the ongoing war in Myanmar since May, according to Radio Free Asia, a regional news service. 

Those who refuse recruitment and assistance to the junta in Rakhine State face beatings and, in some instances, fatal consequences. Other sources share accounts of family members who refused recruitment attempts being detained and then forcefully taken to Myanmar to fight.

Forced recruitment has profoundly affected the lives of Rohingya in Kutupalong Camp, exacerbating their already dire circumstances.

Many Rohingya working with humanitarian organizations cannot go to work due to the high risk, shared Samina Islam*, a humanitarian worker living in the Rohingya Registered Refugee Camp. Samina said the armed groups have also been setting fires in some camps to intimate the community. 

“People are now afraid to leave home,” says Samina Islam, “We can’t sleep well and there are often gunshots heard after dark… The gangs take people mostly at night, but sometimes during the daytime too, so we can never feel safe.”

The armed groups are pitching recruitment to fight the Arakan Army using promises of citizenship and coercion through threats of abduction, beatings, and repercussions on one’s family. 

In Rakhine State, where coerced recruitment of Rohingya men has been ongoing since February, the junta government has failed to provide citizenship cards to any Rohingya military recruits, despite their earlier promises to do so.

The factions driving recruitment in the camp say that the Rohingya must forge alliances with the Myanmar army, an old enemy, to confront the new threat of the Arakan Army.

Nearly 1 million people live in the Cox’s Bazar camps, according to the United Nations. Recent accounts from the Kutupalong Refugee Camp in Cox’s Bazar echo reports of coerced recruitment akin to those witnessed this year in Rakhine State, perpetrated by Rohingya nationalist groups.

Over 1,000 Rohingya men in Rakhine State, Myanmar have been abducted and forcibly recruited by the Myanmar military to fight on its behalf against the Arakan Army (AA), an insurgent force. Rohingya men and their family members have faced beatings and arrest after refusing to comply with conscription and undertake military training to support the junta’s conflict in Rakhine State. To evade recruitment efforts, over 100,000 young men have fled their homes. 

The junta is applying a conscription law to recruit Rohingya young men to assist with their internal conflicts with other ethnic groups. However the law only applies to citizens of Myanmar, and is therefore violating international human rights law when applied to the Rohingya population – as the Rohingya have been denied citizenship in the country since the 1982 Citizenship Law was enacted.

“Myanmar’s military, which has committed atrocities against the Rohingya for decades while denying them citizenship, is now forcing them to fight on its behalf,” said Shayna Bauchner of Human Rights Watch.

Noor Kolima, a human rights defender residing in Kutupalong Camp, said the forced recruitment of youth for the Myanmar military is impacting all Rohingya residing in the camps in Bangladesh. Noor reports that the deteriorating situation is leaving Rohingya youth feeling increasingly unsafe.

Rohingya refugees interviewed for this story and reports from other news outlets accuse three armed groups – the Rohingya Salvation Organization (RSO), the Arakan Rohingya Army (ARA),  and Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) – of coordinating recruitment efforts through widespread intimidation, threats of violence, and abduction. 

Gangs lack broad support among Rohingya in the camps, leading to escalating conflict between residents and gang members.

Mahmudul said that in many instances, residents of entire blocks, including women and children, have confronted armed RSO members in an effort to protect the young men in their families. 

Fires involving shelters and offices within Kutupalong Camp have been reported and verified. Many in Kutupalong allege that the fire outbreaks are a deliberate response to the unrest within camp, as the situation is pitting the armed groups against the wider Rohingya community, resulting in retribution and retaliation efforts. 

Suspicions and allegations that Bangladesh’s Armed Police Battalion is complicit in gang recruitment activities were widespread among interviewed Rohingya refugees. Rumors allege the Bangladeshi police are turning a blind eye to the violent and intimidating activities of the groups, failing to arrest the perpetrators, and even facilitating movement of Rohingya youth to the Myanmar border.

Gang violence between the RSO, ARA, and ARSA  is also increasing, adding to insecurity. The groups are in conflict, battling for control over different camps within the settlement. 

On June 10, a violent conflict erupted in Camp 4, resulting in the death of three RSO members at the hands of ARSA members.

The constant threat of abduction or violence has created a climate of fear and insecurity within the camps. The highly stressful environment is taking a significant toll on the community’s daily life, and physical and mental wellbeing.

Families are often compelled to act as unofficial security in their own blocks, staying vigilant to protect their loved ones. Guards have been hired in some blocks to maintain watch for threats to young men and adolescent boys in the camp.

MHM Kolim Ullah* from Camp 14 expressed, “The feeling of extreme stress and tension within the camp now makes it impossible for us to feel safe or envision a future.”

“I am always in danger,” said Kyaw Myint Aung, “There is no safety, no security… Now the refugee camp is like hell for innocent refugees.”

*Names have been changed in order to protect sources from reprisals.

Dayna Santana Pérez

Dayna Santana Pérez is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Sydney and humanitarian program director.

Rohingya Beaten, Forests Set Ablaze by AA and Rakhine Mobs in Northern Maungdaw
ASEAN invites the appointed Foreign Ministry of Myanmar to join the summit
Three Rohingya Abducted by Arakan Army as Disinformation Campaign Intensifies
Rohingya Prisoners Dying Daily Due to Torture and Malnutrition in Buthidaung Prison
Intense Clashes Between AA and ARSA in Northern Maungdaw
TAGGED:MyanmarRohingya crisisRohingya Refugee
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Facebook

Latest News

From Insurgency to Governance: How the Arakan Army is Reordering Rohingya Life
Op-ed
Water Shortage in Maungdaw Town Creates Hardship for Residents
Myanmar
Fire Breaks Out in Camp-2W Early Morning
Bangladesh Camp Watch Rohingya 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

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?