Myanmar authorities have apprehended more
than 2,200 Rohingya Muslims as they attempted to illegally leave the
country by sea since 2015, according to a list of the detainees obtained
from a naval officer by RFA’s Myanmar Service.
Nearly 1,500 Rohingya were detained in
2015, more than 500 were picked up in 2018, and roughly 250 have been
apprehended so far in 2019, according to the list provided by the
officer, who declined to be named because he is not authorized to give
information to the media.
The figures does not include Rohingya who
fled by land from two military-led crackdowns in northern Rakhine state
in 2016 and 2017. During the first round of violence, about 90,000
Muslims left and headed across the border and into Bangladesh, while the
second more brutal clampdown forced more than 740,000 out of their
villages and into Myanmar’s neighboring country.
Thousands of other Rohingya have tried to
leave Myanmar in the last several years to escape institutionalized
persecution, grinding poverty, and insecurity in Rakhine state. They
have paid human traffickers hundreds of dollars each to transport them
to other Muslim-friendly nations in Southeast Asia where they hoped to
have a better life.
But because of restrictions on their
freedom of movement, the Rohingya cannot freely travel inside or outside
Myanmar without first obtaining official permission. Those who decide
to travel illegally usually do not take identification cards with them,
which all Myanmar residents must carry.
A group of nearly 70 Rohingya who had
fled Rakhine state with the help of traffickers and headed to Malaysia
were arrested in Yangon region’s Hlegu township on Feb. 20-21. They are
now on trial for violating Myanmar’s nationality statutes for traveling
illegally and without documentation.
On Feb. 14, authorities picked up 19
Rohingya, including four children, in Magway region’s Minhla township.
The children were taken to a youth training center in Mandalay, while
the adults are now on trial for violating nationality statutes, said
township immigration officer Aung Pyi Soe.
In a larger incident, the Myanmar Navy on
Dec. 15 detained a vessel carrying 174 Rohingya in waters off the
country’s southern tip, west of Kawthaung town in the southern
Tanintharyi region.
Instead of facing charges, the members of
the group were transferred by boat to Rakhine state in early January,
where immigration officials in the regional capital Sittwe determined
their places of origin and sent them back to their villages and to
internal displacement camps.
On Nov. 28, authorities arrested 96
Rohingya at sea off Pathein township in Myanmar’s Ayeyarwady region
after they boarded a boat from Rakhine.
All the arrested Rohingya have been
charged under Section 6(3) of Myanmar’s Immigration Act and face prison
sentences of six months to two years if found guilty.
‘Not the answer’
Rohingya rights activists have decried
the arrests and trials, blaming the Myanmar government for failing to
address the root causes of the illegal flight.
Tun Khin, president of the Burmese
Rohingya Organisation UK, said the government must extend basic rights
to the Rohingya, who are considered illegal immigrants from Bangladesh
and denied full citizenship.
“If the Myanmar government gives us
citizen rights, lets us live in our places [of origin] by rebuilding our
houses, lets us travel in our country, and abolishes unfair laws that
affect us, these flight cases can be reduced,” he said.
“Yes, the government can do it at any
time, but it is not willing to do it,” he said. “We urge the government
to do these things. We [also] want justice from the international
community.”
Myanmar is the subject of a lawsuit file
at the International Court of Justice by the small African nation
Gambia, accusing the Southeast Asian country of violating the 1948
Genocide Convention during the alleged expulsion of more than 740,000
Rohingya to Bangladesh amid the 2017 crackdown.
The campaign of violence left thousands
of Rohingya dead, while some of those who tried to flee were subject to
torture, mass rape, and community burnings.
The government and security forces have
defended the action as a counterinsurgency against a Muslim militant
group in northern Rakhine. The military has pledged to prosecute
soldiers who committed atrocities and so far has held three
courts-martial.
Rohingya activist Thar Aye said it is
preferable that authorities return the captured Rohingya to their places
of origin rather than prosecute them, and that they should focus their
efforts on charging traffickers.
“It is a good action,” he said. “Because
they are not guilty, it is the right action to send them back to their
places of origin.”
“After sending them back, authorities
need to investigate and take action against the people and organizations
involved in these human trafficking cases,” he added. “If they do this,
there will be a decrease in the number of flight attempts in the
future.”
But Nickey Diamond, a Myanmar human
rights specialist with the Southeast Asia-based NGO Fortify Rights,
disagreed, saying that Rohingyas who are caught and returned will likely
leave again if their situation doesn’t change for the better.
“Even if they are sent back to their
places of origin, they are going to flee again if they can’t survive,”
he said. “And then, some will be arrested in Myanmar’s territorial
waters, though others will make it to other countries.”
Reported and translated by Khet Mar for RFA’s Myanmar Service. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/myanmar/more-than-1700-rohingya-caught-02282020162919.html?fbclid=IwAR2b3fE4ox7imSIH6GQG2mKNkiWBEs7B86L4o37gDTGWt31QJab2fJX21j4
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