Amnesty: Rohingya fighters killed scores of Hindus in Myanmar
Rights group says Rohingya rebels killed as many as 99 Hindu villagers
in one day in August last year.
Amnesty International
says it has evidence that fighters from a Rohingya armed group killed scores of
Hindu members of their community in Myanmar's Rakhine state last year.
In a report published
on Tuesday, the global rights group said fighters from the Arakan Rohingya
Salvation Army (ARSA) rounded up and killed as many as 99 Hindu civilians on
August 25, 2017.
The killings in
Maungdaw township occurred on the same day ARSA staged attacks on some 30
security posts in Rakhine, Amnesty said.
Those attacks prompted a brutal military crackdown that forced nearly 700,000 Rohingya into neighbouring Bangladesh.
Rohingya refugees said Myanmar's security forces killed and raped hundreds, and set fire to their homes - a campaign the UN said amounted to ethnic cleansing.
The Rohingya are denied citizenship in Myanmar and have long complained of persecution in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.
While the alleged crimes against Rohingya Muslims has been widely documented, Amnesty's report on Tuesday is the first research into abuses committed by ARSA.
Tirana Hassan, Amnesty's crisis response director, said perpetrators of the killings must be held to account.
"It's hard to ignore the sheer brutality of ARSA's actions, which have left an indelible impression on the survivors we've spoken to," she said in a statement.
Citing testimony from survivors and witnesses, Amnesty said masked ARSA
fighters rounded up 69 Hindu men, women and children in the village of Ah Nauk
Kha Maung Seik and killed 53 of them.
Victims
included 23 children - 14 under the age of eight - along with 10
women and 20 men. Only 16 people, eight women and eight of their children,
survived.
The
survivors, who were abducted and taken to Bangladesh, told Amnesty they were
spared after they promised to convert to Islam.
Describing
the attack, Bina Bala, 22, a survivor, told Amnesty: "[The men] held
knives and long iron rods. They tied our hands behind our backs and blindfolded
us.
"I
asked what they were doing. One of them replied, 'You and [ethnic] Rakhine are
the same, you have a different religion, you can't live here'."
Some of
the women initially told journalists in Bangladesh that Rakhine Buddhists were
responsible for killing Hindu villagers, but later retracted their stories and
blamed the Rohingya fighters instead.
Amnesty
attributed the inconsistencies to "the pressures and threats to personal
safety they faced while in Bangladesh".
Myanmar's
security forces uncovered the 45 bodies from Ah Nauk Kha Maung Seik in four
mass graves at the site of the killings in September.
Also on
August 25, 46 Hindu men, women, and children in the neighbouring village of Ye
Bauk Kyar disappeared and were presumed killed by the Rohingya rebels, though
their bodies haven't been found.
The group
also said ARSA fighters were involved in the killing of six Hindu people on
August 26 last year near Myo Thu Gyi village.
Myanmar's
government must allow independent investigators, including a UN fact finding
mission, access to Rakhine to uncover the full extent of the human rights
abuses committed there, Amnesty added.
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