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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Over 10,000 Rohingya poised to enter Bangladesh

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ENDLESS MISERY: Myanmar’s northern state of Rakhine has been emptied of half of its Rohingya population in weeks -


Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh: More than 10,000 Rohingya have massed in Myanmar near a crossing point into Bangladesh, Myanmar media said on Tuesday, apparently poised to join an exodus across the border due to food shortages and fear of attacks in their mainly Buddhist homeland.


Over 500,000 Rohingya have streamed into Bangladesh in just the past five weeks, and numbers are again swelling, raising doubt about the practicality of a Myanmar proposal to begin repatriating them.


Myanmar’s northern state of Rakhine has been emptied of half of its Rohingya population in weeks.


More are on the move as insecurity presses them to leave those villages which have so far been spared the worst of the violence that ripped through the state.


Attacks by Rohingya militants on August 25 spurred a ferocious Myanmar army crackdown that the UN says amounted to “ethnic cleansing”.


Over 10,000 “Muslims” have arrived “between Letphwekya and Kwunthpin village to emigrate to the neighbouring country”, the state-backed Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported on Tuesday.


Violence appears to have ebbed in northern Rakhine, although independent reporting is still prevented by an army lockdown.


But fear has unsettled many of the Rohingya who remain threatened by Myanmar’s army and their hostile ethnic Rakhine neighbours and cut off from aid agencies.


After a brief lull in arrivals, the Bangladesh Border Guard says 4-5,000 Rohingya are now crossing each day.


“They don’t want to stay (in Myanmar). They want to come here... they are being told to leave,” Lieutenant-Colonel S M Ariful Islam said.


Food is also running out, with villagers too fearful to tend to their crops in case they are attacked by their neighbours.


“In some villages they are scared to pass by Rakhine villages,” Chris Lewa, from Rohingya advocacy group the Arakan Project, said.


On Monday, Myanmar’s Minister of the Office of State Counsellor, Kyaw Tint Swe, told Bangladesh his country was ready to accept refugees subject to a verification process agreed in the early 1990s by the neighbours.


The minister’s offer applies only to those who fled in the past year, according to a Bangladeshi official — excluding some 300,000 Rohingya who fled earlier.


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