It’s a five-hour boat ride and then a short drive
from the Arakan State capital to Maungdaw, a predominately Muslim
township in the country’s west that became a major concern for the
Burmese government following allegations that dozens of people were
killed there last month.
Setting off from
Sittwe early in the morning, a boat winds north along Kaladan river,
packed with hundreds of passengers, and then connects with Mayou River
as it heads west. Most passengers are Arakan State natives, traveling to
a destination
where foreign tourists are banned, and where international NGOs have
sought access in recent weeks but have largely been denied.
For
entertainment on a journey earlier this month, a video played from a
television on board. The program of choice was a Buddhist dhamma talk,
featuring a senior monk who was a member of the nationalist 969
movement, which opposes interfaith marriage and urges people in
Buddhist-majority Burma to shun Muslim businesses.
Passengers
listened as the monk spread messages of fear, warning that Muslim men
were trying to bolster their numbers in the country, in part by marrying
multiple wives and having many children. “Look at Pakistan, which was
Buddhist in the past. It has become a Muslim country because the Muslims
have such a large population. Our people need to be careful,” the monk
said.
Anti-Muslim rhetoric has become common in
Arakan State, especially since 2012, when two bouts of inter-communal
violence between Buddhists and Muslims left scores dead and about
140,000 people displaced. The majority of victims were Rohingya, a
Muslim minority that faces severe discrimination because local Buddhists
allege that they came illegally from neighboring Bangladesh, although
many trace their roots in Burma back generations.
“We
feel we are going to have a war with them. We heard their armed groups
have been active along the border, and that this will spread,” says
Thein Tun Aye, an Arakanese Buddhist in Sittwe, referring to government
claims that the Rohingya Solidarity Organization (RSO), an Islamist
militant group, was involved in the killing of a policeman in Maungdaw
last month.
In Sittwe, a coastal town of some
180,000 people, Buddhists and Muslims have been segregated since the
violence in 2012, with many Muslims confined to a ghetto-like
neighborhood known as Aung Mingalar. That’s where Rohingya rights
activist Aung Win must go whenever he wants to visit his parents,
offering money to officials in order to enter. “I pay security forces a
bribe of 20,000 kyats [US$20] every time,” he tells The Irrawaddy,
adding that his own home is in Bume Quarter, also in Sittwe.
About
an hour’s drive from the town, thousands of people continue to take
shelter in camps after being displaced by the violence. They have
received limited assistance from the government and international
humanitarian organizations, but some say they struggle to feed their
families.
“We do not have enough food here. I’m
especially worried for my children,” says Zohra, a 30-year-old Muslim
woman who lives in Thetkepyin camp. She says she is afraid to return to
her home in Sittwe and will continue to live in the camp, despite the
poor conditions.
In many ways, Sittwe seems a
world away from Maungdaw, where Buddhists are a small minority compared
with Muslims. The township is known in the state as the “western gate,”
with Buddhists claiming that it is the entry point for illegal
immigrants from Bangladesh.
A river demarcates the two countries, and Rohingya fishermen work on boats to haul in their daily catch with nets.
During
The Irrawaddy’s visit earlier this month, a teenage boy said he earns
about 2,000 kyats ($2) per day but can sometimes make about 5,000 kyats
if he’s lucky. In a group of about 20 people, only two fishermen spoke
Burmese.
The Burmese government built a fence
to block illegal immigrants from entering the country. The fence
included barbed wire at a security compound, but not far away the wire
had been removed, with large gaps between the poles in the ground. A
police officer with the border guard security force, speaking on
condition of anonymity and requesting not to be photographed, said the
fence stretched for almost 5 kilometers.
About
15 minutes away from the river by motorbike is the town of Maungdaw,
home to 23,000 people, of whom about 20,000 are Muslim. At the call to
prayer, bearded men in long white tunics walk together to a mosque,
while women wear black niqabs that leave only their eyes visible.
Earlier this month, the town appeared busy but peaceful during the day.
At night, however, the roads were quiet. After dark, Buddhists could be
found walking the streets, but most Muslim residents remained inside.
Tensions
have lingered after allegations of violence in Du Chee Yar Tan village,
about 45 minutes away from Maungdaw town by motorbike. The village in
southern Maungdaw Township was allegedly where more than 40 Rohingyas
were killed by a Buddhist mob last month, according to the UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights. The Burma government has vehemently
denied these killings, but Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), a medical
humanitarian organization, says it treated 22 wounded people in the
village in the days following the alleged attack.
Security officials warn outsiders not to enter Du Chee Yar Tan alone.
“They
do not trust other people except Muslims. So, if you are going inside
the village, it will be dangerous for you,” police lieutenant Wai Phyo
Zaw told The Irrawaddy, adding that he would send no less than 10 well-armed officers into the area for any operation.
More details at http://www.shinarahancruises.com/blog/aboattriptomaungdaw
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