IQNA

Evidence of Rohingya Mass Graves Uncovered in Myanmar

13:06 - February 01, 2018
News ID: 3465096
TEHRAN (IQNA) – Scores of Rohingya Muslim villagers in Myanmar have been massacred and buried in 5 mass graves, according to an exclusive investigation by AP.

 

The report by the news agency on Thursday includes witness testimony from two dozen survivors and relatives of victims, as well as time-stamped mobile phone footage of the aftermath of the attack. 

Estimates suggest 400 members of the persecuted minority were killed by Myanmar troops. 

In one massacre, a group of men were picking teams for a local football-like game called 'chinlone' in the village of Gu Dar Pyin, when soldiers began firing at them. 

A survivor named Noor Kadir later found six of his friends buried in two separate mass graves. He said the bodies of the victims were only recognizable through the color of their shorts. 

The mass killing is believed to have taken place on August 27 and survivors told AP that soldiers had tried to cover up evidence of the atrocity. 

Video obtained by the agency indicates attempts at using acid to remove the bodies. 

The remains contained inside the shallow graves rose to the surface after heavy rainfall and survivors were able to film the evidence. 

Phil Robertson of Human Rights said the report "raises the stakes for the international community to demand accountability from Myanmar" and underlined the need for a UN-led arms embargo on the country. 

 "The AP's report that (soldiers) brought along to Gu Dyar Pin village containers of acid to disfigure the bodies and make identification more difficult is particularly damning because it shows a degree of pre-planning of these atrocities," Robertson said. 

"It's time for EU and the US to get serious about identifying and leveling targeted sanctions against the Burmese military commanders and soldiers responsible for these rights crimes." 

Myanmar has previously admitted responsibility for one mass grave containing 10 bodies in the village of Inn Din. 

The killings happened in September but authorities only acknowledged them after the discovery of the mass grave in December, claiming those who had died were "terrorists". 

Amnesty International described the December discovery as just the "tip of the iceberg". 

Since August 2017, more than 655,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled Myanmar to neighboring Bangladesh fleeing what the UN describes as "textbook genocide". 

Myanmar's military claims that it is fighting what it terms "terrorists" but survivors crossing into Bangladesh bring with them accounts of mass killing, rape, and the burning down of homes. 

Bangladesh and Myanmar have agreed a deal to send Rohingya refugees back. As part of the repatriation deal, Rohingya will be held in holding centers, which Rohingya activists have called "concentration camps". 

Widely regarded as one of the most persecuted minorities in the world, the Muslim Rohingya people are denied citizenship by the Burmese government, which claims they are not native to Myanmar.

Tags: iqna ، muslims ، rohingya ، myanmar
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