(New York) – Burmese security forces have responded to sectarian violence in northern Arakan State with mass arrests and unlawful force against the Rohingya Muslim population, Human Rights Watch said today. Local police, the military, and a border security force known as Nasaka have committed numerous abuses in predominantly Muslim townships while combating the violence between the Rohingya and ethnic Arakan, who are predominantly Buddhist, that broke out in early June 2012.
Human Rights Watch urged the Burmese government to end arbitrary and
incommunicado detention, and redeploy and hold accountable security
forces implicated in serious abuses. Burmese authorities should ensure
safe access to the area by the United Nations (UN), independent
humanitarian organizations, and the media.
“The Burmese government needs to put an immediate end
to the abusive sweeps by the security forces against Rohingya
communities,” said Elaine Pearson,
deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Anyone being held should
be promptly charged or released, and their relatives given access.”
Burmese security forces have been implicated in killings and other
abuses since the sectarian violence in northern Arakan State began,
Human Rights Watch said. For instance, on June 23, in a village near the
town of Maungdaw, security forces pursued and opened fire on two dozen
Rohingya villagers who had been hiding from the violence in fields and
forest areas. The total killed or wounded is unknown, but one survivor
told Human Rights Watch that out of a group of eight young men who were
fleeing, only two managed to escape unharmed after the security forces
fired on them.
“Everybody was so scared,” he told Human Rights Watch. “We saw them
entering and we left, trying to get out of the village. There was a
canal, but some people could not cross it and the army shot at them and
killed them.”
The recent sectarian violence began after an ethnic Arakan woman was
allegedly raped and killed by three Muslim men on Ramri island in
southern Arakan State in late May, which was followed by the June 3
killing of 10 Muslims by an Arakan mob in Toungop. On June 8, thousands
of Rohingya rioted in the town of Maungdaw, destroying Arakan property
and causing an unknown number of deaths. Groups of Rohingya subsequently
committed killings and other violence elsewhere in the state, burning
down Arakan homes and villages. Arakan groups, in some cases with the
collusion of local authorities and police, committed violence against
Rohingya communities, including killings and beatings, and burning down
Muslim homes and villages.
On June 10, President Thein Sein declared a state of emergency in
northern Arakan State, which permits the armed forces to carry out
arrests and detain people without fundamental due process protections.
While the Burmese army has largely contained the sectarian violence,
abuses by security forces against Rohingya communities appear to be on
the upsurge in recent weeks, Human Rights Watch said.
Local police and the Nasaka, claiming to be searching for Rohingya
criminal suspects involved in the sectarian strife, have conducted mass
round-ups of Rohingya. On July 1, the state-run New Light of Myanmar
reported that 30 Arakan suspects were arrested for the June 3 killings.
Nevertheless, the mass arrests ongoing in northern Arakan State seem to
be discriminatory, as the authorities in these townships do not appear
to be investigating or apprehending Arakan suspected of criminal
offenses, Human Rights Watch said. The total number of people arrested,
their names, and any charges against them have not been reported.
Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that state security forces violently
raided predominately Rohingya villages in Maungdaw township, firing on
villagers and looting homes and businesses. In several villages, police
and Nasaka dragged Rohingya from their homes and violently beat them.
Witnesses in villages outside of Maungdaw said dozens of people,
including women and children, were taken away in mid-June in Nasaka
trucks to unknown locations, and have not been heard from since. Mass
arrests of Rohingya have also taken place in Buthidaung and Rathedaung
townships. Witnesses in Maungdaw township described several instances in
which Arakan men wielding sticks and swords accompanied the security
forces in raids on Rohingya villages. A 27-year-old Rohingya man told
Human Rights Watch, “Twenty-five of my relatives have been arrested.… I
saw with my own eyes, two of my nephews were taken by the military and
Nasaka. They tried to hide themselves in the large embankments in the
paddy fields, but some Arakan found them and stabbed them with long
knives. They stabbed them and took them to the jail.”
Human Rights Watch documented the destruction of Buddhist temples,
mosques, and thousands of Arakan and Rohingya houses that were burned to
the ground during the sectarian violence, leaving an estimated 90,000
people displaced and taking segregated refuge in temporary camps and
community sites. Hundreds of Rohingya fled across the nearby border to
Bangladesh, where many were forced back by Bangladeshi border guards.
“The violence in Arakan State has devastated both the Rohingya and
Arakan communities, but government efforts to identify and arrest those
responsible should not result in further abuses,” Pearson said. “The
sectarian violence and state of emergency provides no excuse for the
security forces to continue their past record of abuses and
discrimination against the Rohingya community.”
The Burmese government restricts international access to northern
Arakan State – an area comprising the predominantly Muslim townships of
Maungdaw, Buthidaung, and Rathedaung – and severely curtails freedom of
movement for Rohingya residents. The Nasaka’s long history of
arbitrary detentions, torture, and other ill-treatment of Rohingya
detainees heightens concerns about the recent mass arrests, Human Rights
Watch said.
The government has not allowed independent investigations in the
affected areas since the violence began. On June 6, Thein Sein ordered a
high-level government committee to investigate the causes of the
violence, identify the perpetrators, and issue recommendations. The
committee is scheduled to present its findings by August 30. However,
there are concerns about the independence and objectivity of the
investigation committee, given that it includes local security forces and Arakan State officials, Human Rights Watch said.
The government should invite the UN special rapporteur on human rights
in Burma, Tomas Quintana, to Arakan State to conduct an urgent visit to
investigate the violence and conduct of the security forces, Human
Rights Watch said. The authorities should immediately disclose the
location of all detention centers, provide the names of all detainees,
bring them promptly before a judge, and allow independent humanitarian
agencies access to all facilities.
Human Rights Watch urged the United States, European Union, ASEAN,
Australia, Japan, and other countries concerned about human rights in
Burma to press the government to allow an independent and thorough
investigation of the violence, and to ensure that the basic rights of
those detained are respected. They should also call upon the Bangladesh
authorities not to return or push back those fleeing violence and to
provide them temporary protection.
“The Burmese government should demonstrate that the political changes
taking place in the country extend to the ethnic areas, and that abuses
by local authorities will not be tolerated,” Pearson said. “This means
stopping the violations, holding abusive officials to account, and
promptly permitting an independent investigation.”