A burnt property in Meiktila following attacks on Muslims,March 2013. photo by Hein Aung |
Following recent attacks in
central Myanmar against Muslims, the displaced have been fleeing to the central
city of Mandalay. Buildings were burnt down and the ‘official’ death toll stood
at 32, as angry mobs roamed the streets. The reality of events is very
different from what we have heard on our TV screens. Burmese state media is not
the most reliable of sources and very few independent or Western journalists
have reported directly from the ground.
The displaced are scattered across the city, accommodated
by fellow Muslims and are still very scared to return to their homes in Meiktila,
a hundred miles away.
I traversed through side streets to the site of one
building housing the displaced. Young men stood guard, looking wary and
suspect. After a long discussion we were allowed in to interview some of the
refugees, they asked for their faces to be blurred out on camera. The metal
gates to the building were unlocked and we were allowed in.
Hafiz, a seventeen-year-old student, had been in school
at the time when the violence began. His teacher told him to run,
“we ran, we saw the younger children falling over, the older kids had to help them,” he said, recalling his account. “We hid, and then moved from place to place until we were rescued and brought here. I’m not sure where some of my other friends are.”
He looked around to his classmates in the small open space opposite a
mosque in the mainly Muslim district of Mandalay. I showed him some pictures from a local journalist; two
of them were of dead teenagers. He put his hand up to the camera touching the screen,
“that’s my friend,” he said.
We showed him another and he struggles to speak
“and this one, those are Osama and Karimullah,”
he paused; his friends surrounded
the camera and inspected the pictures of bodies on the ground, in unnatural
poses.
One body, Osama’s, has a massive gash to the back of the neck, which
looks like it was caused by a machete. The other boy had a massive laceration
in a similar place, both bodies had been there for three days before a local
journalist, Hein Aung, took the pictures. They are too graphic to print. The
class mates consoled each other, two friends lost. The pictures confirm their
fears, but there are still friends unaccounted for, but we have no more
pictures that can be identified, the rest are of burnt corpses. Not that that
was a comfort to these young men, to anyone. Nearby, one hundred and five year
old Kairunbi, laid on the floor, exhausted. Her seventy-one year-old daughter
watched over her.
Hafiz's friend. Murdered in Meiktila, March 2013. photo by Hein Aung |
“We had to use a stretcher to get her here,” she told me. “We will go back when it is safe to do so,” she added. “We could be here for a while.”
Muslims have long been an oppressed minority in Myanmar.
Last year’s massacre of the Rohingya Muslims caused outrage in the Muslim world
but the Western media gave it little attention. The Rohingya are not recognised
as Burmese citizens. The darling of the West Aung San Suukyi, a former
political prisoner, democracy advocate, and current member of the Burmese
Parliament, remained silent when asked about the Rohingya, an action further
cementing their fate, as the leader of democracy in Burma refrained to speak
out for their freedom.
This time, the Muslims are Burmese citizens, not
Rohingya, but this did not stop them from being attacked. Every person
interviewed said that the police stood by and did nothing whilst they were
being attacked. Many here believe that this was pre-planned and that the
official story, that it began with a dispute in a gold shop, is just a cover
for violence against Muslims. The extremist Buddhist monk, Wirathu, had only
given one of his sermons ten days before the violence. His group, 969, is
infamous for their extreme views and protests against Muslims who they call
‘invaders’ and ‘Kalar’ - a racist term used to describe Muslims. He is known in
the country for his anti-Muslim stance, he has even published a book called
‘From the jaws of a wolf”, which tells a story of a Buddhist woman married to
an abusive Muslim man.
We continued throughout Mandalay, interviewing person after
person displaced by the riots. But this violence was different from that in the
Arakan state last year, although the anti-Muslim sentiment was the same. This
time, local Buddhists and student groups from nearby Mandalay city launched a
rescue operation saving hundreds of lives. The local Buddhists from Mandalay
city, who have lived side by side with Muslims for centuries, were not prepared
to have their neighbours slaughtered.
Myint Myint, who was saved by a Buddhist monk, said she
blames the Buddhists in Meiktila, not the ones in Mandalay. Her nephew, Farooq,
aged just fourteen, saw people beaten to death and then burnt. His voice
crackled recalling the events, he and others hid in some houses and looked on
as the slaughter took place. None of the above interviewed wanted their face on
camera; they fear reprisals from extremist Buddhists if they are found out to
have spoken to a foreign journalist.
Khin Htay Yee, was not afraid, though. She broke down in
tears as she recalled how her Buddhist factory manager sheltered them in the
factory as the slaughter took place outside. The mob outside threatened the
manager that if he did not let the women out that they would break in and rape
every last woman. She managed to make a phone call to Mandalay where some Buddhist
monks had already left to rescue Muslims from the onslaught of the enraged mob.
The violence took place over three days and only stopped
once the army came in and restored order to the streets. The majority of the displaced
are still being kept in a sports stadium in Meiktila, guarded by the military.
Muslims in Burma are now afraid that the violence will
spread even further and there is even a strong indication, due to protests,
leaflets and military movement that a third massacre against the Rohingya
Muslims in Arakan is planned for the coming days. The language of propaganda is
reminiscent of that in the Balkans before the Bosnian genocide, Muslims are
accused of invading, of waging jihad, of acts of violence against Buddhists,
but many here believe that the military is behind the increase in violence,
something Human Rights Watch pointed out in their report on the violence in
Arakan last year accusing the military of complicity in the massacre. The
Burmese military junta ruled Burma until recent political reforms, which has
opened up the country somewhat to the West.
A Muslim in Yangon told me
“the military want to assert their power, and want to prove they are the ones that can restore order, they are using us to prove their point.”
If this is the case, then we will see more
deaths in the coming weeks.
Copyright:
You are free to share (copy, distribute, transmit), remix (adapt) and make commercial use of this article. Please just credit to Assed Baig, include link to AssedBaig.com and consider supporting @rj_fund http://rohingyajournalismfund.blogspot.co.uk/ a crowd funded project that made this report possible.
Copyright:
You are free to share (copy, distribute, transmit), remix (adapt) and make commercial use of this article. Please just credit to Assed Baig, include link to AssedBaig.com and consider supporting @rj_fund http://rohingyajournalismfund.blogspot.co.uk/ a crowd funded project that made this report possible.
2 comments:
Great work.
One day, all of Bingarlee(you call Rohingya) will die like this. we don't accept any Bingarlee, countryless on our land anymore.
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