Rohingya Mubarak Begum,
who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds a photograph of
her family members, in Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017.
Begum says the government took pictures of Rohingya families annually to
track their numbers. Her daughter Rubina Begum (face scratched ) was
not able to make the crossing with them and is still in Maungdaw.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
Rohingya Mubarak Begum,
who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds a photograph of
her family members, in Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017.
Begum says the government took pictures of Rohingya families annually to
track their numbers. Her daughter Rubina Begum (face scratched ) was
not able to make the crossing with them and is still in Maungdaw.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
Untitled [Sun Valley, CA): photo by ashnolo, 4 September 2017
Untitled [Sun Valley, CA): photo by ashnolo, 4 September 2017
Untitled [Sun Valley, CA): photo by ashnolo, 4 September 2017
Rocking Horse Dreams with Lifeboat and Smoke Alarm
South Central Avenue. Phoenix, Arizona.: photo by Dean Terasaki, 5 September 2017
South Central Avenue. Phoenix, Arizona.: photo by Dean Terasaki, 5 September 2017
South Central Avenue. Phoenix, Arizona.: photo by Dean Terasaki, 5 September 2017
The New Navaho Bridge. Looking southwest from the Historic Navaho Bridge. This view includes Marble Canyon, the Colorado River, and the current route for Highway 89A.: photo by Dean Terasaki, 5 September 2017
The New Navaho Bridge. Looking southwest from the Historic Navaho Bridge. This view includes Marble Canyon, the Colorado River, and the current route for Highway 89A.: photo by Dean Terasaki, 5 September 2017
The New Navaho Bridge. Looking southwest from the Historic Navaho Bridge. This view includes Marble Canyon, the Colorado River, and the current route for Highway 89A.: photo by Dean Terasaki, 5 September 2017
I-84 now closed in the Columbia River Gorge because of fire threat. WB traffic must exit at exit 62, EB traffic at exit 63.: image via Oregon DOT @OregonDOT, 4 September 2017
#eaglecreekfire surrounds Munra Point in the Columbia River Gorge. Level 3 evacuations in place for Warrendale and Dodson.: image via Multnomah Co Sheriff @MultCoSo, 4 September 2017
It's incredibly sad to see the damage from the fire in our scenic Columbia River gorge.: image via Mike Reese @SheriffReese, 5 September 2017
Deputy Bohrer caught this photo while on patrol west of Cascade Locks. #EagleCreekFire: image via Multnomah Co Sheriff @MultCoSo, 8 September 2017
In the pantheon of visual metaphors for America today, this is the money shot.: image via David Simon @AoDespair, 7 September 2017
In
fact, a brilliant illustration of cultural and climate denial.
(Beacon Rock WA. "Our golfers are committed to finishing the round!").: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 7 September 2017
Waves crash on the seafront boulevard of El Malecon in Havana, Cuba: image via Reuters Pictures @reuterspictures, 9 September 2017
Lucita Leonce 71,
complains in front of her home flooded by heavy rains brought on by
Hurricane Irma, in Fort-Liberte, Haiti, Friday Sept. 8, 2017. Irma
rolled past the Dominican Republic and Haiti and battered the Turks and
Caicos Islands early Friday with waves as high as 20 feet (6 meters).: photo by Dieu Nalio Chery/AP, 8 September 2017
Lucita Leonce 71,
complains in front of her home flooded by heavy rains brought on by
Hurricane Irma, in Fort-Liberte, Haiti, Friday Sept. 8, 2017. Irma
rolled past the Dominican Republic and Haiti and battered the Turks and
Caicos Islands early Friday with waves as high as 20 feet (6 meters).: photo by Dieu Nalio Chery/AP, 8 September 2017
Residents watch a
televised weather forecast hours before the arrival of Hurricane Irma,
in Caibarien, Cuba, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. Cuba evacuated tourists from
beachside resorts after Hurricane Irma left thousands homeless on a
devastated string of Caribbean islands and spun toward Florida for what
could be a catastrophic blow this weekend.: photo by Desmond Boylan/AP, 8 September 2017
Residents watch a
televised weather forecast hours before the arrival of Hurricane Irma,
in Caibarien, Cuba, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. Cuba evacuated tourists from
beachside resorts after Hurricane Irma left thousands homeless on a
devastated string of Caribbean islands and spun toward Florida for what
could be a catastrophic blow this weekend.: photo by Desmond Boylan/AP, 8 September 2017
Handlers from the Cayo
Guillermo dolphinarium prepare dolphins for their transfer to the
dolphinarium in Cienfuegos, located on Cuba's southern coast, just hours
before the arrival of Hurricane Irma, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. Irma spun
along the northern coast of Cuba, where thousands of tourists were
evacuated from low-lying keys off the coast dotted with all-inclusive
resorts.: photo by Osvaldo Gutierrez Gomez/ACN via AP, 8 September 2017
Handlers from the Cayo
Guillermo dolphinarium prepare dolphins for their transfer to the
dolphinarium in Cienfuegos, located on Cuba's southern coast, just hours
before the arrival of Hurricane Irma, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. Irma spun
along the northern coast of Cuba, where thousands of tourists were
evacuated from low-lying keys off the coast dotted with all-inclusive
resorts.: photo by Osvaldo Gutierrez Gomez/ACN via AP, 8 September 2017
Over 60 dead after Mexico's strongest quake in 85 years: image via Reuters Pictures @reuterspictures, 9 September 2017
Found this particularly painful, the "temblor" reasserting its place in the heritage. #MexicoEarthquake #Saragoza #Oaxaca @AFPphoto: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 9 September 2017
A Border Patrol vehicle
drives in front of a mural in Tecate, Mexico, just beyond a border
structure Friday, Sept. 8, 2017, in Tecate, Calif. French artist JR
erected a 65-foot-tall cut-out photo of a Mexican boy by pasting it to
scaffolding built in Mexico and is aiming to prompt discussions about
immigration. The image overlooks a section of wall on the California
border and will be there for a month.: photo by Gregory Bull/AP, 8 September 2017
A Border Patrol vehicle
drives in front of a mural in Tecate, Mexico, just beyond a border
structure Friday, Sept. 8, 2017, in Tecate, Calif. French artist JR
erected a 65-foot-tall cut-out photo of a Mexican boy by pasting it to
scaffolding built in Mexico and is aiming to prompt discussions about
immigration. The image overlooks a section of wall on the California
border and will be there for a month.: photo by Gregory Bull/AP, 8 September 2017
Looking at @Getty 9/11 anniversary pkg. 16 yrs in, Ground Zero more an icon for architecture, real estate, tourism.: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 9 September 2017
It would be comic if problems weren't a mile high, and the relationship w the press wasn't in the tank. Shouting from afar. Photo @WinMc @Getty: image via Reading The Pictures @ReadingThePix, 9 September 2017
President Donald Trump
shouts to reporters as he walks with first lady Melania Trump to board
Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017,
in Washington.: photo by Evan Vucci/AP, 8 September 2017
President Donald Trump
shouts to reporters as he walks with first lady Melania Trump to board
Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017,
in Washington.: photo by Evan Vucci/AP, 8 September 2017
A man sits on a lifeguard tower as Hurricane Irma approaches in Hollywood, Florida: image via Reuters Pictures @reuterspictures, 9 September 2017
A woman walks through a
nearly empty passage at Miami International Airport, Friday, Sept. 8,
2017 in Miami. Hurricane Irma scraped Cuba's northern coast Friday on a
course toward Florida, leaving in its wake a ravaged string of Caribbean
resort islands strewn with splintered lumber, corrugated metal and
broken concrete.: photo by Wilfredo Lee/AP, 8 September 2017
A woman walks through a
nearly empty passage at Miami International Airport, Friday, Sept. 8,
2017 in Miami. Hurricane Irma scraped Cuba's northern coast Friday on a
course toward Florida, leaving in its wake a ravaged string of Caribbean
resort islands strewn with splintered lumber, corrugated metal and
broken concrete.: photo by Wilfredo Lee/AP, 8 September 2017
A girl ties her home closed with a string as her family leave for a local shelter ahead of Hurricane Irma in Florida: image via Reuters Pictures @reuterspictures, 9 September 2017
From left-to-right: Katia, Irma, and Jose.
Collectively, this is the most active (strength + size) the Atlantic has seen in recorded history.: image via Eric Holthaus @EricHolthaus, 8 September 2017
I must not be sleeping enough, I'm starting to see shapes in the clouds.: image via Marcus Yam @yamphoto, 18 September 2017
See The Living God! Alive and Inside! [Buckeye, Cleveland]: photo by David Grim, 30 May 2017
See The Living God! Alive and Inside! [Buckeye, Cleveland]: photo by David Grim, 30 May 2017
See The Living God! Alive and Inside! [Buckeye, Cleveland]: photo by David Grim, 30 May 2017
Whites [Memphis, TN]: photo by Andrew Murr, 7 September 2017
Rootman's Out Of Sight Cafe - Must Be 21. Another club passes into history. [Yazoo City, MS]. Another club passes into history.: photo by Andrew Murr, 9 September 2017
Insight [Memphis, TN]: photo by Andrew Murr, 7 September 2017
Chillin an' grillin [Memphis, TN]: photo by Andrew Murr, 8 September 2017
Falls Road [Baltimore]: photo by Andrew Murr, 8 September 2017
Untitled [Baltimore]: photo by Patrick, June 2017
Trinidad, Colorado: photo by Jorge Guadalupe Lizárraga, October 2016
Tucumcari, New Mexico: photo by Jorge Guadalupe Lizárraga, October 2016
Untitled : photo by ashnolo, 29 October 2016
Untitled : photo by ashnolo, 29 October 2016
Untitled : photo by ashnolo, 29 October 2016
Untitled: photo by Kanrapee Chokpaiboon, 14 August 2015
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 4 September 2017
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 4 September 2017
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 4 September 2017
Untitled : photo by ashnolo, 4 December 2016
Untitled : photo by ashnolo, 4 December 2016
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 4 December 2016
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 15 August 2017
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 15 August 2017
Untitled: photo by ashnolo, 15 August 2017
S. [Lublin, Poland]: photo by Marcin Butryn, 24 February 2017
[Untitled]: photo by the 4 headed lion, 7 August 2017
[Untitled]: photo by the 4 headed lion, 7 August 2017
[Untitled]: photo by the 4 headed lion, 7 August 2017
[Untitled]: photo by diadá, 30 October 2007
DSCF4473-1: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 30 June 2014
DSCF4473-1: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 30 June 2014
DSCF4473-1: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 30 June 2014
Untitled: photo by Oscar_from_Denmark, 8 June 2014
Untitled: photo by Yuro De Iullis, 9 November 2014
Untitled: photo by Yuro De Iullis, 9 November 2014
Untitled: photo by Yuro De Iullis, 9 November 2014
Another day at the animal park: photo by Oscar_from_Denmark, 23 October 2014
Untitled. Mexico City, 2016.: photo by Ken Walton, 22 December 2016
Untitled. Mexico City, 2016.: photo by Ken Walton, 22 December 2016
Untitled. Mexico City, 2016.: photo by Ken Walton, 22 December 2016
Untitled [Chile]: photo by Jano Soto Cossio, 30 May 2017
Follow the Path [London]: photo by the_big_smoke/, 10 September 2015
Follow the Path [London]: photo by the_big_smoke/, 10 September 2015
Follow the Path [London]: photo by the_big_smoke/, 10 September 2015
Untitled: photo by Oscar_from_Denmark, 18 May 2016
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 2 February 2016
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 2 February 2016
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 2 February 2016
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 11 January 2017
Untitled[Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 11 January 2017
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 11 January 2017
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 4 February 2016
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 4 February 2016
Untitled [Sao Paulo]: photo by Gustavo Gomes, 4 February 2016
[Untitled]: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 11 March 2017
[Untitled]: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 11 March 2017
[Untitled]: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 11 March 2017
08-07806: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 20 October 2016
08-07806: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 20 October 2016
08-07806: photo by Albino Jazz Singer, 20 October 2016
Untitled [Chile]: photo by Jano Soto Cossio, 30 March 2017
Untitled: photo by murat harmanlikli, 8 February 2016
Untitled: photo by murat harmanlikli, 8 February 2016
Untitled: photo by murat harmanlikli, 8 February 2016
Untitled: photo by BoRIS THE FLASH, 27 June 2016
Untitled [Melbourne]: photo by Jose Sanchez, 30 January 2015
Untitled [Melbourne]: photo by Jose Sanchez, 30 January 2015
Untitled [Melbourne]: photo by Jose Sanchez, 30 January 2015
Rohingya refugees reach for food aid
at the Kutupalong refugee camp in Ukhiya near the Bangladesh-Myanmar
border, August 30, 2017.: photo by AFP/Stringer, 31 August 2017
A Rohingya woman breaks
down after a fight erupted during food distribution by local volunteers
at Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. The massive refugee
camp in Kutupalong was set up in the early 90s to accommodate the first
waves of Rohingya Muslim refugees who started escaping convulsions of
violence and persecution in Myanmar. With the current influx pushing
existing Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the brink, Bangladesh
pledged to build at least one more. The International Organization for
Migration has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and
shelter tens of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or
stranded in a no-man's land between the two countries' borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
A Rohingya woman breaks
down after a fight erupted during food distribution by local volunteers
at Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. The massive refugee
camp in Kutupalong was set up in the early 90s to accommodate the first
waves of Rohingya Muslim refugees who started escaping convulsions of
violence and persecution in Myanmar. With the current influx pushing
existing Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the brink, Bangladesh
pledged to build at least one more. The International Organization for
Migration has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and
shelter tens of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or
stranded in a no-man's land between the two countries' borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
In this Sunday, Sept. 3, 2017 photo, Myanmar’s Rohingya ethnic
minority refugees scuffle for food rations distributed by Bangladeshi
volunteers near Cox’s Bazar’s Gundum area, Bangladesh.: photo by Bernat
Armangue/AP, 3 September 2017
In this Sunday, Sept. 3, 2017, file photo, Myanmar's Rohingya ethnic
minority refugees walk after crossing the Bangladeshi border near Cox
Bazar's Kanjopara area Bangladesh. The U.N. refugee agency is reporting a
surge in the number of Rohingya Muslims who have crossed into
Bangladesh from Myanmar, with an estimated 270,000 arriving in the last
two weeks.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 3 September 2017
Displaced
Rohingya refugees from Rakhine state in Myanmar walk near Ukhia, at the
border between Bangladesh and Myanmar, as they flee violence on
September 4, 2017.: photo by K.M. Asad/AFP, 4 September/ 2017
Broken dishes can be seen in the
burned-out remains of a house in Myo Thu Gyi village near Maungdaw,
Rakhine State, Myanmar, on August 31, 2017.: photo by AFP/Stringer, 31 August 2017
...water [Rakhine state, Myanmar]: photo by Claire Alexander, 12 January 2012
Village_Day_1_953[Rakhine state, Myanmar]: photo by Claire Alexander, 12 January 2012
Flag of Bangladesh at Village [Rakhine state, Myanmar]: photo by Claire Alexander, 17 January 2012
96 Tears for the Rohingya
Smoke rises from a
burned house in Gawdu Zara village, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar
Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. Journalists saw new fires burning Thursday in
the Myanmar village that had been abandoned by Rohingya Muslims, and
where pages from the Quran were seen ripped and left on the ground.: photo by AP, 7 September 2017
Smoke rises from a
burned house in Gawdu Zara village, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar
Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. Journalists saw new fires burning Thursday in
the Myanmar village that had been abandoned by Rohingya Muslims, and
where pages from the Quran were seen ripped and left on the ground.: photo by AP, 7 September 2017
An
estimated 270,000 Rohingya have sought refuge in Bangladesh over the
past two weeks, U.N. refugee agency says. Photo: Rohingya refugees carry
their
child as they walk through water after crossing border by boat through
the Naf River in Teknaf, Bangladesh.
REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain: image via Reuters Pictures @reuterspictures, 8 September 2017
A Rohingya woman
comforts her exhausted son as they take shelter inside a school after
having just arrived from the Myanmar side of the border at Kutupalong
refugee camp, Bangladesh, Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. Some 164,000 Rohingya
from the area have fled across the border in Bangladesh in less than
two weeks since Aug. 25, when Rohingya insurgents attacked police
outposts in Gawdu Zara and several others, the U.N. refugee agency said
Thursday.: photo by Bernat Armangue, 7 September 2017
A Rohingya woman
comforts her exhausted son as they take shelter inside a school after
having just arrived from the Myanmar side of the border at Kutupalong
refugee camp, Bangladesh, Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. Some 164,000 Rohingya
from the area have fled across the border in Bangladesh in less than
two weeks since Aug. 25, when Rohingya insurgents attacked police
outposts in Gawdu Zara and several others, the U.N. refugee agency said
Thursday.: photo by Bernat Armangue, 7 September 2017
What They Carry
Rohingya Mubarak Begum, who
crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds a photograph of her
family members, in Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
What Rohingya carry as they flee Myanmar violence: text by MUNEEZA NAQVI; photos by BERNAT ARMANGUE: AP, 8 September 2017
TEKNAF, Bangladesh (AP) -- Cellphones
to reach out to separated relatives. Bags of spices that remind them of
home. Solar panels to bring a little light to their ragged tents.
These
are some of the things that group upon group of terrified, starving,
exhausted ethnic Rohingya Muslims carry with them as they escape the
violence that they’ve endured in Myanmar’s Rakhine state over the last
two weeks.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017, photo, a Rohingya Muslim man arrives with a sack of belongings and
a kettle tied to a stick as he crosses the border into Bangladesh's
Teknaf area.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
The exodus began Aug. 25, after Rohingya insurgents attacked police
posts in Rakhine. The Myanmar government says nearly 400 people have
been killed in fighting it blames on insurgents, though Rohingya say
Myanmar troops and Buddhist mobs attacked them and destroyed their
villages.
They packed a few precious items into used sacks and bamboo baskets,
then fled on foot through forests, or on precarious boats on
rain-swollen rivers.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017, photo, a Rohingya Muslim carries vegetables in a vessel after
crossing over the border from Myanmar into Bangladesh in Teknaf area.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
DOCUMENTS
Many
carry documents from their life back in Myanmar, wrapped in layers of
plastic to protect them from the rain. National ID cards, school ID
cards, little bits of laminated paper that prove that even their
grandparents lived in that country.
One family brought land and
property records, proof of less than an acre of land they bought in
1994. Also proof of their desire to one day return to the place they
still call home.
A Rohingya Nur Bashar, who
recently crossed over the border from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds
documents of property and land his family owns in Myanmar, in
Kutupalong, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
SOLAR PANELS
Small
solar panels are everywhere in the makeshift refugee camp that has
sprouted up to accommodate many of the more than 270,000 people the
United Nations says have entered Bangladesh since the violence started.
A
little girl carried a panel on her back as she crossed into Teknaf
after braving a risky crossing on the Naf River that runs between
Myanmar and Bangladesh. The dark-blue-and-white panels are also perched
on the plastic roofs of their shelters.
“We got it so that in the dark we can have some light,” said one man.
Others use the solar panel to charge the other possession almost everyone brings.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017, photo, a Rohingya Muslim child carries a solar panel as she
crosses over the border from Myanmar into Bangladesh in Teknaf area.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
CELLPHONES
Tied
in plastic pouches and hung around their necks, or tucked into the
waistbands of their wraparounds, cellphones allow Rohingya to reach
relatives who arrived in Bangladesh during earlier waves of fear-fueled
migrations from Myanmar. They also allow them to reconnect with
relatives they became separated from along the tricky journeys that
bring them to safety.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017, photo, a mobile phone is charged by a solar panel brought across
the border by a Rohingya in Teknaf area, Bangladesh.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
MEMORY CARDS
Those
who don’t carry cellphones still often bring memory cards from their
abandoned phones. Some Rohingya said they erased personal photos and
videos because they were afraid that Myanmar soldiers would use them to
find and persecute their families left behind.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017, photo, a Rohingya Muslim displays a memory card carried across the
border from Myanmar into Bangladesh in Teknaf area. Cellphones to reach
out to separated relatives, bags of spices that remind them of home and
solar panels to bring a little light to their ragged tents are some of
the things the exhausted Rohingya Muslims carry with them as they escape
the violence that they’ve endured in Myanmar’s Rakhine state over the
last two weeks. Those who don’t carry phones still often bring memory
cards from their abandoned ones.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
SPICES
Food
in the camps is scarce. Most people eat only when aid agencies or local
volunteers bring bags of food, most often rice and watery curry.
But
even in these dire circumstances, many Rohingya have brought with them
spices from their homeland: pungent red chilies drying on plastic
sheets; fiery chutneys in battered boxes; dried beef in bamboo cases.
“Even
if all we get to eat is a plate of rice, we can burn a red chili and
mix it and it will taste nice,” says a woman in the Kutupalong refugee
camp
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017 photo, red chilis are spread on a plastic sheet carried across the
border from Myanmar into Bangladesh by fleeing Rohingya Muslim in Teknaf
area.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
BIRDS
Rohingya had to leave behind the vast majority of their livestock.
Cattle now wander among the blackened remains of their incinerated
homes.
Some weary travelers, however, managed to tuck a chicken, duck or goose into their bags.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017 photo, a duck pops its neck out of a bag, carried across the border
from Myanmar into Bangladesh by fleeing Rohingya Muslim in Teknaf area.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
history that inconvenient burden
An
open letter from Desmond Tutu to Aung San Su Kyi on #RohingyaMuslims
genocide: image via Dr Lauren Gavaghan @DancingTheMind, 8 September 2017
#AungSanSuuKyi
is a criminal, if anything she deserves to be totally despised for her
silence on atrocities against Rohingya! #HelpRohingya: image via Samiullah Khan @Samiull89711825, 2 September 2017
#AungSanSuuKyi is a lesson in why the #NobelPeacePrize should only be awarded posthumously. #Myanmar #Burma #RohingyaGenocide: image via Habibies @Habibies, 3 September 2017
#TakeNobelBackFromAungSanSuuKyi Take nobel peace prize back from #AungSanSuuKyi. Retweet if u agree: image via Safdar sikandar @safdarjamali12, 5 September 2017
Why is #AungSanSuuKyi not being tried for genocide and crimes against humanity? How long will #Rohingya suffer??: image via ABS @absadir, 4 September
Aung San Suu Kyi during the BBC interview: photo by BBC via The Independent, 25 March 2016
Aung
San Suu Kyi made angry 'Muslim' comment after tense exchange with BBC
presenter Mishal Husain, it is claimed: Burmese leader reportedly
angered by questions about anti-Islamic attitudes in the country: Heather Saul, The Independent, 25 March 2016
Aung San Suu Kyi lost her cool following a
tense interview with BBC presenter Mishal Husain and was heard
muttering "no one told me I was going to be interviewed by a Muslim", it
has been claimed.
The leader of Burma’s National League for Democracy was challenged on
anti-Islamic attitudes and violence towards Muslims in Burma, a
majority Buddhist nation where Muslims make up just four per cent of the
population.
When Husain asked about the plight of Muslims during the 203 interview, Ms Suu Kyi, who is expected to undertake a formal position in power next month, insisted it did not represent “ethnic cleansing”.
Aung San Suu Kyi, whose party is due to take over the government: photo by Getty via The Independent, 25 March 2016
“It's a new problem and yet it's linked to old problems as well,” she said.
“I would like to make the point that there are many moderate Muslims
in Burma who have been well integrated into our society, but these
problems arose last year and I think this is due to fear on both sides.
"This is what the world needs to understand; that the fear is not
just to the side of the Muslims but on the side of the Buddhists as
well.”
Husain pressed her to accept that the “vast majority” of victims of violence had been Muslim.
And according to an excerpt in the book by Peter Popham, The Lady And The Generals: Aung San Suu Kyi And Burma’s Struggle For Freedom,
Suu Kyi was so incensed about being challenged that she reportedly said
off-air: “No one told me I was going to be interviewed by a Muslim."
Zardari and PPP leaders honoured this woman #AungSanSuuKyi who is killing Muslims in #Myanmar #Burma #RohingyaMuslims: image via Malik Zubair Awan @ZubairSabirPTI, 3 September 2017
Expose Gen Min Aung Hlaing, the com-in-chief, who is the real power
behind the #EthnicCleansing of #Rohingya in #Burma: image via Mezanur
Rashid @MezanurRashid, 8 September 2017
hunger, little hope
In this Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017 photo, 25-year-old
Rohingya Muslim woman Zahida Begum cradles her few-hours-old son who she
gave birth to alone in the toilet outside the room, at Kutupalong
refugee camp, Bangladesh. Begum had crossed into Bangladesh on Sept. 1,
with her two young sons, husband and mother, fleeing shootings and arson
attacks by Myanmar army soldiers and local monks. Through hours of
walking through this massive refugee camp, set up in the early 90s to
accommodate the first waves of Rohingya Muslim refugees who started
escaping convulsions of violence and persecution in Myanmar, Associated
Press reporters could not spot a single doctor. There are no clinics or
pharmacies or even basic first aid centers.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
Fleeing Rohingya face hunger, little hope in Bangladesh camp: Muneeza Naqvi, AP, 8 September 2017
KUTUPALONG REFUGEE CAMP, Bangladesh (AP) — In a corner of a room in a
sprawling expanse of squalid shanties and tents, Zahida Begum holds in
her arms the tiny boy she gave birth to just hours ago. Her eyes are
blank.
The 25-year-old ethnic Rohingya Muslim crossed into Bangladesh from
Myanmar on Sept. 1 with her two young sons, husband and mother, fleeing
shootings and arson attacks by Myanmar soldiers and Buddhist monks, her
family says.
Having spent all their money on smugglers who helped them cross the
Naf river to safety, she now sits afraid and unsure of what will come
next.
The massive Kutupalong refugee camp of tiny mud houses covered with
plastic sheets, with its overpowering stench of rotting food and feces,
is now her home.
She gave birth alone, in the toilet outside the room, says her
mother, Dildar Begum. The baby has not been fed since his birth 10 hours
ago. She’s feverish and shivers so much that her mother lit a small,
smoky fire to warm her up. She is still bleeding from the birth.
No doctor is in sight in the camp, set up in the early 1990s to
accommodate earlier waves of Muslim Rohingya refugees escaping from
convulsions of violence and persecution in Buddhist-majority Myanmar.
There are no clinics or pharmacies or even basic first aid centers.
New arrivals like Begum and her family survive on the kindness of
older refugees and on food handouts from local volunteers and aid
groups: rice and curry once a day if they are lucky.
“She’s been crying from hunger,” her mother said of her weak and ailing daughter. Begum simply stares.
Myanmar’s government refuses to recognize Rohingya as a minority
group and denies them citizenship, even though about 1 million were
living there until two weeks ago and many families had been there for
generations.
The exodus of Rohingya like Begum into neighboring Bangladesh is
massive in scale. The United Nations says 270,000 have crossed over
since Aug. 25. But it’s really impossible to accurately count how many
have come.
Every single day thousands upon thousands enter Bangladesh. They
cross the Naf river that runs between Myanmar and Bangladesh on rickety
wooden boats. The journey is especially dangerous now because the river
is swollen from months of monsoon rains. Others cross the land border
between the two countries, walking for days through forests to escape
detection.
In Bangladesh, one of the world’s poorest and most crowded countries,
these people say they finally feel safe. But hunger and illness are a
constant presence.
With the influx pushing existing Rohingya refugee camps like this one
to the brink, Bangladesh has pledged to build at least one more. But
it’s unclear when that will happen.
“Our teams are seeing streams of people arriving destitute and
extremely traumatized,” including many in need of urgent medical care
for violence-related injuries, the aid group Doctors Without Borders,
known by its French acronym MSF, said in a statement.
The International Organization for Migration has pleaded for $18
million in donations to help feed and shelter tens of thousands now
packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a no-man’s land between
the two countries’ borders.
In the Kutupalong camp, reporters saw several newly arrived children
burning with high fevers. At the Cox’s Bazar district government
hospital, four Rohingya men with gunshot wounds described Myanmar
soldiers entering their villages and randomly opening fire. The hospital
said it was treating 31 other men with gunshot wounds.
Myanmar’s government has denied any abuses by its troops and instead
says it is fighting terrorists. It says a group of Rohingya insurgents
and villagers themselves set fire to their own homes in Rakhine state.
It offers no explanation of why an already miserable and impoverished
group of people would destroy their own homes and exhaust their meagre
savings to take treacherous journeys to an unknown land for a life of
extreme uncertainty.
In the camps it’s often hard to separate the anguish of the new
arrivals from the suffering of those who have been here for years or
decades.
Outside Begum’s room a young Rohingya man stands, holding back tears.
Kutupalong camp is the only home 22-year-old Farid has ever known. He
was born here to parents who were part of the first wave of refugees to
flee Myanmar.
He says life in the wretched place makes him doubt his faith in God.
He did not want to give his last name or be photographed because he
has enrolled in a local school using fake Bangladeshi documents. As a
refugee he is only given education up to the fifth grade.
“There is nothing, nothing here ... no doctors, clean water,
education,” he said, rage and helplessness coursing through his skinny
body.
He wants to be a doctor. He wants to break out of the cycle of misery his people have been trapped in for decades.
He flits between hope and despair, sometimes in the same sentence.
What of the tens of thousands of new refugees who are putting incredible pressure on the already teeming camp?
“These are my people. I’m also a Rohingya,” he said. “I want to help them, but I cannot.”
On Friday afternoon, two infants were interred in the cemetery that has grown on the edge of the camp.
A 6-day-old baby, born on the road as his family escaped, was buried next to a 2-day-old child born to a long-time resident.
In this Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017 photo, 25-year-old
Rohingya Muslim woman Zahida Begum cradles her few-hours-old son who she
gave birth to alone in the toilet outside the room, as her husband
Abdur Rahman mixes a plate of rice for his wife at Kutupalong refugee
camp, Bangladesh. Rahman had to leave his ailing wife and go search for
food. He came back with the plate of rice and small bowl of curry. That
food is the first food his wife and son shared all day.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
Rohingya men dig a grave in Kutupalong’s refugee camp’s
cemetery, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. This massive refugee camp
was set up in the early 90s to accommodate the first waves of Rohingya
Muslim refugees who started escaping convulsions of violence and
persecution in Myanmar. With the current influx pushing existing
Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the brink, Bangladesh pledged to
build at least one more. The International Organization for Migration
has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens
of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a
no-man’s land between the two countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
A Rohingya man holds the body of a two-day-old baby before
his burial at Kutupalong’s refugee camp cemetery, Bangladesh, Friday,
Sept. 8, 2017. This massive refugee camp was set up in the early 90s to
accommodate the first waves of Rohingya Muslim refugees who started
escaping convulsions of violence and persecution in Myanmar. The current
influx is pushing existing Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the
brink. Nowhere is this more apparent than the cemetery that has sprouted
on one edge of the camp. On Friday, two infants were interred there. A
six- day old baby, who was born on the road as his family escaped, was
buried next to the two-day-old child born to a woman from the old camp.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
In this Sept. 5, 2017 photo, newly arrived Rohingya rest
in a makeshift tent in Kutupalong, Bangladesh. This massive refugee camp
was set up in the early 90s to accommodate the first waves of Rohingya
Muslim refugees who started escaping convulsions of violence and
persecution in Myanmar. With the current influx pushing existing
Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the brink, Bangladesh pledged to
build at least one more. The International Organization for Migration
has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens
of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a
no-man’s land between the two countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 5 September 2017
In this Sept. 5, 2017 photo, bamboo for building tents are
sold at Kutupalong, Bangladesh. A massive refugee camp in Kutupalong
was set up in the early 90s to accommodate the first waves of Rohingya
Muslim refugees who started escaping convulsions of violence and
persecution in Myanmar. With the current influx pushing existing
Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the brink, Bangladesh pledged to
build at least one more. The International Organization for Migration
has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens
of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a
no-man’s land between the two countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 5 September 2017
In this Sept. 3, 2017 photo, Rohingya children play during
Eid at Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh. This massive refugee camp
was set up in the early 90s to accommodate the first waves of Rohingya
Muslim refugees who started escaping convulsions of violence and
persecution in Myanmar. With the current influx pushing existing
Rohingya refugee camps like this one to the brink, Bangladesh pledged to
build at least one more. The International Organization for Migration
has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens
of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a
no-man’s land between the two countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 3 September 2017
Rohingya Muslims, who have recently crossed over the
border from Myanmar into Bangladesh, offer Friday prayers at a makeshift
mosque in Kutupalong Refugee Camp, Bangladesh, Friday, Sept. 8, 2017.
The massive refugee camp in Kutupalong was set up in the early 90s to
accommodate the first waves of Rohingya Muslim refugees who started
escaping convulsions of violence and persecution in Myanmar. With the
current influx pushing existing Rohingya refugee camps like this one to
the brink, Bangladesh pledged to build at least one more. The
International Organization for Migration has pleaded for $18 million in
foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens of thousands now packed into
makeshift settlements or stranded in a no-man’s land between the two
countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 8 September 2017
Rohingya children, who are older settlers at the camp,
sell cane at Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh, Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017. This massive refugee camp was set up in the early 90s to
accommodate the first waves of Rohingya Muslim refugees who started
escaping convulsions of violence and persecution in Myanmar. With the
current influx pushing existing Rohingya refugee camps like this one to
the brink, Bangladesh pledged to build at least one more. The
International Organization for Migration has pleaded for $18 million in
foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens of thousands now packed into
makeshift settlements or stranded in a no-man’s land between the two
countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
In this Monday, Sept. 4, 2017 photo, a Rohingya man
Kefayet Ullah stands next to the graves of his 25-year-old brother
Jarullah and 21-year-old sister-in-law Ayesha Bibi at a makeshift
cemetery near Cox’s Bazar’s Tumbru area, Bangladesh. The family had
already been in their hasty shelter on the mud bank near Naf River for
days before Jarullah and Bibi decided to go slip back across the border
to their village in Myanmar briefly for a quick bath and clean clothes
before Eid, only to be killed by Myanmar soldiers and Buddhist monks in
an attack witnessed by their cousin. Ullah said he couldn’t bear the
thought of leaving his loved ones behind, and so risked his life to
return and carry their bodies back so they could bury them in peace.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 4 September 2017
Seeking home’s comforts, Rohingya couple make deadly choice: Muneeza Naqvi, AP, 6 September 2017
BANDARBAN, Bangladesh (AP) — The young Rohingya couple fleeing
violence in Myanmar had escaped with their family to nearby Bangladesh,
where they spent days living in a hastily built shelter on a muddy hill.
For the sake of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, they decided to
return home briefly, for a quick bath and clean clothes.
The man’s brother soon followed them — to retrieve their bodies.
“Kefayet Ullah’s brother has been slaughtered near the fence!” a man
shouts in a cellphone video as a cousin carries Jarullah’s body, blood
from the corpse pouring down his back. “They cut his hands and legs and
belly also.”
Kefayet Ullah carried his dead sister-in-law. Wailing and moans —
“Oh, Allah!” — can be heard in the video as the group encounters
villagers along the wooded path.
Ullah said he couldn’t bear the thought of leaving his loved ones
behind, and so risked his life to bring back their bodies so they could
be buried in peace. There was also one life left to save: the couple’s
2-year-old son, who was found near his parents’ bodies.
Like untold numbers of people, Ullah and his family have been caught
up in the latest violence to ravage Rohingya villages in northern
Rakhine state, in the northwest corner of majority-Buddhist Myanmar.
Many have seen their homes burned to the ground. More than 120,000 have
fled for safety in neighboring Bangladesh in less than two weeks since
the violence began.
The Myanmar government said it conducted security “clearance
operations” to root out Rohingya insurgents who attacked at least two
dozen police posts with machetes and rifles.
Rohingya see the violence that followed the insurgent attacks as
something more: a campaign to rid the country of a minority seen by
Myanmar’s authorities as unwanted outsiders. They were denied
citizenship and rights by the country’s former military rulers. And life
has only gotten worse for many since an elected government headed by
Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi took over.
On Aug. 28, three days after the violence began, Ullah and his family
fled, leaving behind their ancestral home, a shop and 10 acres of
farmland.
“The government ordered the military to come to our villages and to
shoot the people who were older than 8,” Ullah said in a small forest
clearing near the refugee-packed seaside city of Bandarban where he
buried his brother and sister-in-law.
Two simple mounds of earth marked the spot. He brushed fallen leaves from the unmarked graves.
In some areas, he said, “they started attacking people and raping the girls and women. They were burning down the houses.”
He paused to fill in holes left in the earth by the hooves of cattle
that had wandered through the makeshift cemetery. Across the road, his
parents, pregnant wife and three sons huddled under a sheet of plastic
propped haphazardly up on bamboo poles.
For the moment, they are safe — one of many families occupying a
muddy patch sticking out of the Naf River in what is essentially a
no-man’s-land between the borders of Myanmar and Bangladesh. But Ullah
said he wasn’t sure how long they could manage in their squalid shelter.
There is no clean water, and no access to toilets.
Refugee camps in Bangladesh have filled beyond capacity, and tens of
thousands are squatting in the open. Meanwhile, Rohingya continue to
pour in through several open areas along the barbed-wire border fence,
or aboard smugglers’ rickety wooden boats.
Even now, the family yearns to go back to their village near the border, the only home Ullah has known.
“Even my grandfather’s father was born there,” he said. But said he
has realized they may never return. Ultra-nationalist Buddhist monks
call his people “Bengali” — meant as a derogatory term implying they
were illegal immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh.
“The monks say that we came from Bangladesh and India. They say you
are not the people of this land. ‘You go from this place,’” he said.
“They think, ’If we burn down Rohingya houses and kill the Rohingya
people and slit their throats, then the number of Rohingya people will
decrease,’” he said, his voice breaking. “That’s why they say there’s no
need to give us citizenship.”
Ullah’s home in Maungdaw township is fairly close to the barbed-wire
fence that marks much of the Myanmar-Bangladesh border. In other places,
the Naf River separates the countries.
The home was close enough that Jarullah, 25, and his 21-year-old wife, Ayesha Bibi, decided to return Saturday morning.
Kefayet Ullah said Jarullah called within minutes of their return and told him soldiers and monks had surrounded their home.
Then, the phone went silent.
Ullah said a terrified cousin managed to escape behind some bushes
and watched. He told Ullah the mob first looted the house of its
valuables, then killed the couple after demanding money and gold from
them.
Ullah said he felt he had no choice but to bring the bodies back. He and his cousin snuck across the border once again to do it.
They buried them later Saturday, the main day of Eid al-Adha.
In this Monday, Sept. 4, 2017 photo, a man holds up a cell
phone displaying an image of 25-year-old Rohingya Muslim man Jarullah
and his 21-year-old wife Ayesha Bibi near Cox’s Bazar’s Tumbru area,
Bangladesh. The family had already been in their hasty shelter on the
mud bank near Naf River for days before Jarullah and Bibi decided to go
slip back across the border to their village in Myanmar briefly for a
quick bath and clean clothes before Eid, only to be killed by Myanmar
soldiers and Buddhist monks in an attack witnessed by their cousin.
Jarullah’s brother Kefayet Ullah said he couldn’t bear the thought of
leaving his loved ones behind, and so risked his life to return and
carry their bodies back so they could bury them in peace.: photo by Bernat Armangue/AP, 4 September 2017
In this image made from Sept. 2, 2017, video, the body of
Jarullah Ullah is carried through a field in Maungdaw, Myanmar, after he
and his wife were killed in violence ravaging Rohingya villages in
northern Rakhine state, in the northwest corner of majority-Buddhist
Myanmar. Like untold numbers of people, this family has been caught up
in the latest violence in Rohingya villages in Myanmar.: photo by AP, 2 September 2017
In this image made from Sept. 4, 2017, video, Kefayet
Ullah speaks about how his brother and sister-in-law were killed in
violence ravaging Rohingya villages in northern Rakhine state, in the
northwest corner of majority-Buddhist Myanmar. Like untold numbers of
people, this family has been caught up in the latest violence in
Rohingya villages in Myanmar.: photo by AP, 4 September 2017
In this image made from Sept. 4, 2017, video, Kefayet
Ullah wipes his eyes as he speaks in Bandarban, Bangladesh, about how
his brother and sister-in-law were killed in violence ravaging Rohingya
villages in northern Rakhine state, in the northwest corner of
majority-Buddhist Myanmar. Like untold numbers of people, this family
has been caught up in the latest violence in Rohingya villages in
Myanmar.: photo by AP, 4 September 2017
Smoke rises from a burned house in Gawdu Zara village,
northern Rakhine state, Myanmar Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. Journalists saw
new fires burning Thursday in the Myanmar village that had been
abandoned by Rohingya Muslims, and where pages from Islamic texts were
seen ripped and left on the ground.: photo by AP, 7 September 2017
New fires in empty Rohingya village challenge Myanmar claims: AP, 8 September 2017
BANGKOK (AP) — Journalists saw new fires burning Thursday in a
Myanmar village that had been abandoned by Rohingya Muslims, and pages
ripped from Islamic texts that were left on the ground. That intensifies
doubts about government claims that members of the persecuted minority
have been destroying their own homes.
About two dozen journalists saw the fires in Gawdu Zara village in northern Rakhine state on a government-controlled trip.
About 164,000 Rohingya from the area have fled across the border into
Bangladesh in less than two weeks since Aug. 25, when Rohingya
insurgents attacked police outposts in Gawdu Zara and several other
villages, the U.N. refugee agency said Thursday.
The military has said nearly 400 people, mostly Rohingya, have died
in clashes and that troops were conducting “clearance operations.” It
blames insurgents for setting the villages on fire, without offering
proof.
Rohingya who have fled Myanmar, however, have described large-scale
violence perpetrated by Myanmar troops and Buddhist mobs — setting fire
to their homes, spraying bullets indiscriminately, stabbing civilians
and ordering them to abandon their homes or be killed.
On the Myanmar side of the border, reporters saw no Rohingya in any
of the five destroyed villages they were allowed to tour Thursday,
making it unlikely they could have been responsible for the new fires.
An ethnic Rakhine villager who emerged from the smoke said police and
Rakhine Buddhists had set the fires. The villager ran off before he
could be asked anything else.
No police were seen in the village beyond those who were accompanying
the journalists. But about 10 Rakhine men with machetes were seen
there. They looked nervous and the only one who spoke said he had just
arrived and did not know how the fires started.
They are Human, Please stop killing them#rohingya!!! #myanmar #StopKillingRohingya #Rakhine: image via Khurshid Hasan @khurshid2hasan, 8 September 2017
Among the buildings on fire was a madrassa, an Islamic school. Copies
of books with texts from the Quran, Islam’s holy book, were torn up and
thrown outside.
A nearby mosque was not burned.
Another village the journalists visited, Ah Lel Than Kyaw, was
blackened, obliterated and deserted. Cattle and dogs wandered through
the still-smoldering remains.
Local police officer Aung Kyaw Moe said 18 people were killed in the village when the violence began last month.
“From our side, there was one immigration officer dead, and we found 17 dead bodies from the enemy side,” he said.
He said the fires were set Aug. 25, though some continued to burn
Thursday.
This
combination of images shows two infrared satellite maps; Jan. 30, 2014,
top; and Sept. 2, 2017, bottom; displaying the town of Maungdaw,
Myanmar. According to Human Rights Watch, the map on bottom shows
predominantly Rohingya homes that were recently destroyed.: photo by Human Rights
Watch via AP, 2014/2017
Virtually all buildings in the village seen by journalists had
been burned, along with cars, motorbikes and bicycles that fleeing
villagers left behind. A mosque was also damaged.
Columns of smoke could be seen rising in the distance, and distant gunshots could be heard.
“They burned their own houses and ran away,” Aung Kyaw Moe said. “We
didn’t see who actually burned them because we had to take care of the
security for our outpost. ... But when the houses were burned, Bengalis
were the only ones in the village.”
Buddhist-majority Myanmar refers to Rohingya as Bengalis, contending
they migrated illegally from Bangladesh, though many Rohingya families
have lived in Myanmar for generations.
Burning the homes of Rohingya can make it less likely they will
return. Tens of thousands of Rohingya were driven from their homes in
another wave of violence in 2012. Many are now confined to camps, while
the land they once held is either vacant or occupied by Buddhist
squatters.
Nay San Lwin, a Rohingya activist and blogger based in Europe with
contacts in northern Rakhine, said that according to witnesses, the
Myanmar military, border guard police and Rakhine villagers came to Ah
Lel Than Kyaw and burned the houses from Monday to Wednesday.
On Aug. 25, he said, young men with swords and knives tried to attack
the border guard outpost in Aley Than Kyaw but failed. The authorities
took away all Buddhist villagers, and many Rohingya villagers fled on
their own.
Nay San Lwin said the remaining villagers left after the military warned them they would be shot if they did not leave.
Myanmar’s leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, has dismissed the Rohingya crisis as a misinformation campaign.
According to her office, she said such misinformation helps promote
the interests of “terrorists,” a reference to the Rohingya insurgents
who attacked security posts on Aug. 25.
The crisis response director for Amnesty International called Suu Kyi’s response “unconscionable.”
On Thursday, Suu Kyi told reporters her government was working to
improve security and livelihoods for Rohingya, but that “it’s a little
unreasonable to expect us to resolve everything in 18 months” since her
administration took office.
With Rohingya fleeing by the thousands daily across the border,
pushing existing camps in Bangladesh to the brink, the government in
Dhaka pledged to build at least one more.
The International Organization for Migration has pleaded for $18
million in foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens of thousands now
packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a no man’s land between
the two countries’ borders.
U.N. agencies said they were distributing food to new arrivals, about
80 percent of whom were women and children, joining about 100,000 who
had already been sheltering in Bangladesh after fleeing earlier
convulsions of violence in Myanmar.
Aid workers said many were arriving with violence-related injuries, severe infections or childbirth complications.
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said Thursday that her
country offered refuge to Rohingya on humanitarian grounds, but called
it a “big burden for us”.
The “international community must take the responsibility,” she said.
Hasina’s government has taken an initiative to identify the refugees
to prevent terrorists from entering Bangladesh under disguise, the local
Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha news agency reported, quoting the prime
minister’s Press secretary Ihsanul Karim.
With so many Rohingya fleeing, it is unclear how many remain in
Myanmar amid reports of soldiers burning villages and killing civilians.
Before the recent violence, aid experts estimated about 1 million
Rohingya were living in northern Rakhine state. But aid agencies have
been unable to access the area since.
Turkish First Lady Emine Erdogan and Foreign Minister Mevlut
Cavusoglu visited a Rohingya camp in Bangladesh and then met with
Hasina.
They said Myanmar agreed to allow its aid officials to enter Rakhine
state with a ton of food and goods for Rohingya. They also pledged
continuing support for the Rohingya.
Houses are on fire in Gawdu Zara village, northern Rakhine
state, Myanmar, Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. Journalists saw new fires
burning Thursday in the Myanmar village that had been abandoned by
Rohingya Muslims, and where pages from Islamic texts were seen ripped
and left on the ground.: photo by AP, 7 September 2017
A Rohingya woman is carried in a cloth sling as she
arrives at Kutupalong refugee camp after having just crossed over from
Myanmar into Bangladesh, Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017. With Rohingya fleeing
by the thousands daily across the border, pushing existing camps in
Bangladesh to the brink, the government in Dhaka pledged to build at
least one more. The International Organization for Migration has pleaded
for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens of
thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or stranded in a no
man’s land between the two countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat
Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
Washed clothes belonging to Rohingya are spread out to dry
on bushes near Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh, Thursday, Sept. 7,
2017. With Rohingya fleeing by the thousands daily across the border,
pushing existing camps in Bangladesh to the brink, the government in
Dhaka pledged to build at least one more. The International Organization
for Migration has pleaded for $18 million in foreign aid to help feed
and shelter tens of thousands now packed into makeshift settlements or
stranded in a no man’s land between the two countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat
Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
An elderly Rohingya hangs washed clothes after having just
crossed from Myanmar into the Bangladesh side of the border by walking
through muddy rice fields at Teknaf border area, Bangladesh, Thursday,
Sept. 7, 2017. With Rohingya fleeing by the thousands daily across the
border, pushing existing camps in Bangladesh to the brink, the
government in Dhaka pledged to build at least one more. The
International Organization for Migration has pleaded for $18 million in
foreign aid to help feed and shelter tens of thousands now packed into
makeshift settlements or stranded in a no man’s land between the two
countries’ borders.: photo by Bernat
Armangue/AP, 7 September 2017
In this Thursday, Sept. 7, 2017, file photo, fire engulfs
homes in the Gawdu Zara village, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar. Two
weeks after violence in western Myanmar caused minority Rohingya Muslims
to flee into neighboring Bangladesh, global reactions to the crisis
have included anger, protests in Islamic country capitals and dismissals
by Myanmar authorities.: photo by AP 7 September 2017
‘Alarming number’ of 270,000 Rohingya flee Myanmar, UN reports: Muneeza Naqvi, AP, 8 September 2017
COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh — The U.N. said Friday that an
“alarming number” of 270,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled violence in
Myanmar by crossing into Bangladesh in the last two weeks.
The
new figure confirmed Friday by U.N. Refugee Agency spokeswoman Vivian
Tan is much higher than the 164,000 the agency had previously estimated
had arrived since Aug. 25.
“This is an alarming number,”
Tan said. “The existing camps are full to the capacity. There is a lot
of pressure on relief agencies to accommodate the rising numbers.”
She said the new number was still a “rough estimate,”
and based on an assessment that involved a host of aid agencies
operating in the area. Some aid groups also had identified “new pockets
of people that we did not know about before, mainly in villages” where
Bangladeshi communities had taken them in, but also some new settlements
and clusters in difficult-to-access areas.
Makeshift camps were quickly appearing and expanding along roadsides, Tan said.
She said it was possible some people who received help from multiple agencies could have been counted twice.
The exodus from Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state began
Aug. 25 after Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts. The military
responded with what it called “clearance operations” to root out any
fighters it said might be hiding in villages of Rakhine state.
The
Myanmar government says nearly 400 people have been killed in fighting
it blames on insurgents, though Rohingya say they Myanmar troops and
Buddhist mobs attacked them and destroyed their villages.
It’s not known how many Rohingya remain in Rakhine state. Previously the population had been thought to be roughly 1 million.
Journalists in northern Rakhine state saw active fires
in areas Rohingya had abandoned, adding to doubts over government claims
that Rohingya themselves were responsible for setting them.
Associated
Press reporters who have been in Rohingya camps all week saw a surge in
the number of people entering Bangladesh on Thursday and Friday.
An
increasing number of Rohingya were also arriving by boat, with 300
boats reaching the Bangladesh town of Cox’s Bazar from Myanmar on
Wednesday alone, according to the International Organization for
Migration.
“Sea routes are particularly dangerous this time of
year, when boats are known to frequently capsize in rough seas,” the IOM
said in a statement.
Dozens of Rohingya have died in
capsizings since the exodus began, and there are other dangers as well.
On Monday, the AP saw an elderly woman whose leg had been blown off when
she set off a land mine.
Land mines were planted years
ago along parts of the border. Bangladeshi officials say Myanmar
soldiers have planted new explosives since the latest wave of violence
began, though the Myanmar military denies it.
“It may not be land mines, but I know there have been
isolated cases of Myanmar soldiers planting explosives three to four
days ago,” Lt. Col. S.M. Ariful Islam, commanding officer of the
Bangladesh border guard in Teknaf, said Friday. He added that he was
aware of at least three Rohingya injured in explosions.
There
are now massive crowds of Rohingya in the streets of towns including
Cox’s Bazar and Teknaf, with relatively few soldiers or police and even
fewer signs of aid agencies.
At a small makeshift mosque
made of bamboo sticks and plastic sheets, a small group of new arrivals
offered prayers Friday, the holiest day of the week in Islam.
Later, members of a local organization were seen
distributing aid, throwing packets of puffed rice and old clothes into
huge crowds of Rohingya. There are no clearly organized points of
distribution.
Tan, of the refugee agency, said it was distributing aid through a local organization that preferred to keep a low profile.
U.N. agencies have released $8 million in emergency aid in the area, but were pleading for millions more.
Between
Oct 91-Dec 92, 270,000 #Rohingya fled #Myanmar to #Bangladesh. In 2017
it only took 14 days for same number of refugees to arrive.: image via Tirana Hassan @TiranaHassan, 9 September 2017
#UN has confirmed refugee count is now 270,000 in Bangladesh. This is
what it looks like driving through Teknaf. #RohingyaCrisis #Rohingya:
image via Tania Rashid @TaniaRashid9, 10 September 2017
#UN has confirmed refugee count is now 270,000 in Bangladesh. This is
what it looks like driving through Teknaf. #RohingyaCrisis #Rohingya:
image via Tania Rashid @TaniaRashid9, 10 September 2017
#UN has confirmed refugee count is now 270,000 in Bangladesh. This is
what it looks like driving through Teknaf. #RohingyaCrisis #Rohingya:
image via Tania Rashid @TaniaRashid9, 10 September 2017
#UN has confirmed refugee count is now 270,000 in Bangladesh. This is
what it looks like driving through Teknaf. #RohingyaCrisis #Rohingya:
image via Tania Rashid @TaniaRashid9, 10 September 2017
An injured Rohingya
Mohammad Salim, 60, receives treatment after crossing over from Myanmar
into Bangladesh, at Chittagong Medical College Hospital in Chittagong,
Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. The U.N. refugee agency is reporting a surge in
the number of Rohingya Muslims who have crossed into Bangladesh from
Myanmar, with an estimated 270,000 arriving in the last two weeks.: photo by A.M. Ahad/AP, 8 September 2017
An injured Rohingya
Mohammad Salim, 60, receives treatment after crossing over from Myanmar
into Bangladesh, at Chittagong Medical College Hospital in Chittagong,
Friday, Sept. 8, 2017. The U.N. refugee agency is reporting a surge in
the number of Rohingya Muslims who have crossed into Bangladesh from
Myanmar, with an estimated 270,000 arriving in the last two weeks.: photo by A.M. Ahad/AP, 8 September 2017
Stats day 15: UN official says more than 1,000 people killed | 270.000 fled to Bangladesh | #Rohinygya @UN @Refugees: image via Ika Ferrer Gotic @IkaFerrerGotic, 8 September 2017
Stats day 15: UN official says more than 1,000 people killed | 270.000 fled to Bangladesh | #Rohinygya @UN @Refugees: image via Ika Ferrer Gotic @IkaFerrerGotic, 8 September 2017
1 comment:
Rudy Martinez ["?"] & The Mysterians: 96 Tears (1966)
Erma Franklin: Piece of My Heart (1967) (music video)
Irma Thomas: It's Raining (1961)
Irma Thomas: It's Raining (live, 2009)
Irma Thomas: It's Raining (live at St Jude Community Center Benefit Concert in New Orleans at Mahalia Jackson Theater, 16 July 2011)
Brook Benton: Rainy Night in Georgia (live, 1982)
Gladys Knight & The Pips: Midnight Train To Georgia (1974) (music video)
Ann Peebles: I Can't Stand the Rain (1974)
Ann Peebles: I Can't Stand the Rain (Rare Unplugged)
Post a Comment