Villages were still being damaged as late as
2 December, contradicting government assurances, says Human Rights Watch
By Michael Safi
The
remains of villages near Maungdaw in northern Rakhine state on 10 October.
Photograph:
Marion Thibaut/AFP/Getty Images
|
Satellite images show that dozens of Rohingya
villages were burned the week Myanmar signed an agreement with Bangladesh to
repatriate hundreds of thousands of refugees, Human Rights Watch has claimed.
The evidence that villages were still being
damaged as late as 2 December contradicted assurances by the Burmese government
that violence had ceased and that the Rohingya could safely return to Myanmar,
the watchdog said.
Bangladesh and Myanmar signed an agreement on
23 November to begin the process of repatriating some of the estimated 655,000
refugees who fled Myanmar in the past four months.
Burmese soldiers, police and militias have
been accused of razing hundreds of villages, gang-raping women and children and
killing indiscriminately, in what the US has labelled a campaign of ethnic
cleansing. Burmese officials claim the reports of violence are exaggerated and
it was largely perpetrated by Rohingya insurgents.
The first repatriations under the agreement
are due in January, a timetable that human rights groups say is unrealistic and
could expose the Muslim minority group to continued persecution, internment or
possible forced resettlement.
HRW said satellite images showing signs of
fires and building destruction in 40 villages in October and November were
proof that the Rohingya could not yet safely return.
“The Burmese army’s destruction of Rohingya
villages within days of signing a refugee repatriation agreement with
Bangladesh shows that commitments to safe returns were just a public relations
stunt,” said Brad Adams, the organisation’s Asia director.
“The satellite imagery shows what the Burmese
army denies: that Rohingya villages continue to be destroyed. Burmese
government pledges to ensure the safety of returning Rohingya cannot be taken
seriously.”
HRW said its analysis showed that about 354
villages had been partially or completely destroyed since army “clearance
operations” commenced in Rakhine state in August after a series of deadly
attacks by Rohingya militants.
It said at least 118 of those villages were
damaged after 5 September, which Aung Sang Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s de facto leader,
has identified as the official end of army operations in the state.
Last week, Médecins Sans Frontières estimated
that at least 6,700 Rohingya, including 700 children, had been killed since the
renewed crackdown in August, which followed similar violence in October 2016.
About 870,000 Rohingya are estimated to have fled the country in recent years.
The Burmese government’s own investigation
found 376 Rohingya “terrorists” died in the fighting and found “no deaths of innocent
people” – a claim contradicted by hundreds of accounts of brutality shared by
refugees in Bangladesh.
On Monday, the UN high commissioner for human
rights, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, said he could not “rule out that possibility
that acts of genocide have been committed” in Rakhine state in recent months.
“It’s very hard to establish because the
thresholds are high,” Hussein told the BBC. “But it wouldn’t surprise me in the
future if the court were to make such a finding on the basis of what we see.”
He said UN investigators had heard testimony
of a “consistent, methodical pattern of killings, torture, rape and arson”.
Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel peace laureate, has
been strongly criticised for her response to the crisis, though it is unclear
how much control she has over the military, which ceded control of some
ministries to her civilian government in 2015 after decades of army rule.