Sindhi
Khan
1st
April 2014
Maungdaw,
Arakan- A Myanmar military battalion commander is squeezing money
from the villagers of Thit-Taw-Nar-Kwa-Sun and Razar Bill
(Nan-Ra-Raing) in region 2, northern Maungdaw, for saving a home
belongs to a Rohingya from getting torched by a group of extremist
Buddhists.
“Around
8:00PM on 28th
March 2014, a Mro Buddhist group sneaked into the eastern part of the
village of Thit-Taw-Nar-Kwa-Sun in Region 2, northern Maungdaw. Then,
they tried to torch a home belongs to Shahkhit Ali (son of) Amir Nur
Mohammed (Age 32). As he shouted out for help, his co-villagers and
the people from the nearby village, Razar Bill (Nan-Ra-Raing), came
together for rescue and drove the Mro Buddhists group away.
Upon
that, G.E. group (Military Engineers), responsible for constructing
roads along the border, informed the nearby Military Battalion.
Around 100 military personnel arrived at the village soon only to
scold Rohingya villagers and confiscate their sticks.
Next
morning (i.e. 29th March 2014 morning), around 10AM, the
commander of the battalion summoned the villagers of
Thit-Taw-Nar-Kwa-Sun and Razar Bill (Nan-Ra-Raing) to the camp.
There, he arrested and detained Shahkhit Ali, whose house was about
to be torched, and 9 other Rohingyas from these villages saying “the
way you people behaved last night was too much.”
The
village administrators of Thit-Taw-Nar-Kwa-Sun, U Nurul Islam, and
that of Razar Bill (Nan-Ra-Raing), U Sayedul Amin, pleaded the
battalion commander in order to get the detained innocent Rohingyas
released. However, the commander demanded a guarantee to pay Kyat 1.4
Millions for their releases from the village administrators. The
people were released together with a threat that they (the people)
would get arrested again and imprisoned if the villagers failed to
fulfill his demand of Kyat 1.4 Million.
Therefore,
Shahkhit Ali (son of) Amir Nur Mohammed has now to pay Kyat 100,000
and his co-villagers have to pay Kyat 800,000. And the people from
the nearby village have to pay Kyat 500,000″ said a villager.
“This
is the price we have to pay for defending our properties and lives.
This is a norm here. This is what they call justice” he exclaimed.
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