Myanmar military kills 26 as unrest mounts in northern Rakhine

The Rakhine State has been effectively split on religious grounds between Buddhists and Muslims since bouts of communal violence tore through the state in 2012, killing scores and forcing tens of thousands to flee
The Rakhine State has been effectively split on religious grounds between Buddhists and Muslims since bouts of communal violence tore through the state in 2012, killing scores and forcing tens of thousands to flee
block
AFP, Maungdaw :
Myanmar troops killed 26 people in northern Rakhine on Wednesday, the military said, as the death toll mounted from a spate of violent clashes in a region long-scarred by sectarian unrest.
Dozens of people have died in the area bordering Bangladesh in the past few days, raising the spectre of a repeat of communal violence that ripped the state apart four years ago and drove tens of thousands into displacement camps.
The latest clashes took place in Kyet Yoe Pyin village near Maungdaw town, an area home to the persecuted Muslim Rohingya minority that has been under lockdown after a series of attacks on border guards.
“As the military troops followed (a group of men) they started to attack, shooting with guns, using sticks and knives,” the military said in a statement. “The attackers retreated to the northwest as the military returned fire.”
“Ten dead bodies of violent attackers and a gun were found.”
“Terrorists” also attacked a border outpost and set fire to 25 houses in Warpaik village as troops conducted clearance operations in the area, the president’s office said in a statement.
Troops have poured into the area around Maungdaw after nine police officers were killed on Sunday in attacks on three border posts which authorities blamed on mobs wielding swords and homemade weapons.
Villagers have fled their homes, while teachers and government workers have flocked to the state capital Sittwe after more than 400 schools were closed and a curfew brought in between 7pm and 6am.
The fresh casualties come after state media reported a series of clashes in the area since Sunday, including one in which four soldiers were allegedly set upon by hundreds of men wielding pistols and swords.
A total of 39 people have died, according to state media, police and government sources, including troops, attackers and the border guards killed in Sunday’s raids.
Most people in the impoverished area are Muslim Rohingya, a stateless minority whom Myanmar’s Buddhist hardliners vilify as illegal immigrants-even though many trace their ancestry in Myanmar back for generations.
Activists claim the military is using the search for the attackers as a pretext for a crackdown on Rohingya, whom rights groups describe as one of the world’s most persecuted peoples.
Rumours of killings and mass arrests have spread like wildfire on social media, stoking fear. But details have proved difficult to confirm in the remote and tightly controlled area.
The commander in chief of Myanmar’s army, Min Aung Hlaing, sought to play down the violence on Wednesday, saying the “current issues in Rakhine were not brought about by religious conflict” and pledging to abide by international rules.
block