London, UK / Yangon,
Burma - The military junta led by Min Aung Hlaing abducted 125 Kaman
Muslims as conscripts in Kyauk Phyu Township in Rakhine State on 28
February. The victims are from Kyauk Ta Lone camp for internally
displaced people (IDP) since 2012. Although Kaman Muslim are
recognised by 1982 law as one of the ethnic of Burma, despite that
being Muslim they have been targeted along with Rohingya in Rakhine
state.
The abduction followed a
visit by junta troops to the camp on 17 February to ask for at least
150 conscripts. The soldiers are from the Light Infantry Division no
542, which is under the command of the Regional Operation Command No.
5 based in Taungggyup Township in Rakhine State, an IDP in the Kyauk
Ta Lone camp who spoke to Burma Human Rights Network (BHRN) on the
condition of anonymity said. He said the soldiers forced the IDPs to
join the military.
The Kyauk Ta Lone IDP
told BHRN that the soldiers threatened the IDPs who are between 18
and 55 years old to join the military or face the consequences of the
military's brutality on their families. He said that's why the IDPs,
who had fled, had to return to the Kyauk Ta Lone camp.
The source said the junta
soldiers put up barricades at the gate of the IDP camp on 27 February
and did not allow anyone inside the camp to leave. At 7 a.m. of the
next day, they abducted 107 IDPs who were aged
between 18 and 45 and also 18 IDPs aged
between 46 and 55 were reportedly taken into the headquarters of the
Light Infantry Division no 542. The source said IDPs were not
interested in joining the military but could not run away because of
fear of reprisals against their families by the junta forces.
Kyauk Ta Lone camp is
situated on the outskirts of Kyak Phyu and close to a military
barracks, ocean, and mountainous terrain, making it difficult for IDP
youth to flee from the camp. Those who managed to run away
were arrested at military and police checkpoints.
The IDPs were residents
of Kyauk Phyu town, but sectarian violence in 2012 pushed them out of
their homes. They have lived in the camp's harsh conditions for more
than ten years. They may now potentially be used as human shields for
the Burmese military, which is facing strong resistance from
pro-democracy forces as well as ethnic armed groups.
The source said Muslims
in Rakhine State who have been facing discrimination for the past
many years are also facing the danger of oppression by the ethnic
armed group, the Arakan Army (AA), who recently seized several towns
in Rakhine State from the Myanmar military in recent
months.
|
Comments
Post a Comment