Bittersweet Eid ul Fitr For 2 Rohingya Muslims In Malaysia

Hamida, 22, (center) and her son Mohammed, aged one, wait to receive food aid along with hundreds of other Rohingya refugees, at Kutupalong Refugee Camp, in Bangladesh. © UNHCR/Andrew McConnell
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Arakan News Agency

It was a bittersweet Eid ul Fitr for two Rohingya Muslim men who had been victims of human trafficking syndicates at Wang Kelian and Padang Besar, southern Thailand.

Nurul Amin Nobi Hussein, 25, who was rescued from a transit camp at Bukit Wang Burma, Wang Kelian last year is very thankful to be able to celebrate Eid ul Fitr. But he also grieves for the senseless death of friends at the camp.

“I am so happy to be able to fast and celebrate Eid ul Fitr in Malaysia without any fear. In Myanmar, Muslims who gather to pray on Eid ul Fitr morning will be arrested by the army,” he told Bernama.

Detained for two months at the ‘death camp’ at Wang Kelian, he said ethnic Rohingya in Myanmar were confined to celebrating Eid ul Fitr with family members at home in their village.

“I contacted my parents in Maungdaw, Myanmar. They did not celebrate Eid ul Fitr, it was like any other day, just staying in the house,” he said.

According to him, Rohingya Muslims were required to seek permission from the army if they wanted to visit their relatives in other villages during Eid ul Fitr or ordinary days.

“They would be jailed if they failed to do so. The army do not want us to move freely,” he said.

This year he got to celebrate Eid ul Fitr with ease, with his wife Nur Khaidha Abdul Shukur, 24, and their two children, Mansur Ali aged four and five-month old Mohamad Yasir at their present home at Simpang Kuala, Alor Setar.

His wife who was rescued after 10 days at a transit camp at Padang Besar, southern Thailand, was one of the witnesses who came forward to testify about the rape of Rohingya women by guards at the camp.

“This year is more special because I could buy new clothes for my children, cook food and make etnic Rohingya traditional cakes to celebrate. We also freely visited friends at wherever they were staying,” Nurul Amin said.

Jahedul Islam, 25, said Muslims in Malaysia were very blessed to be able to celebrate Eid ul Fitr in a peaceful environment.

“I am very happy to be celebrating Eid ul Fitr in Malaysia but I also feel very sad that my family and relatives have to live under oppression by the Myanmar army.

“I also grieve and feel a sense of guilt when I think of friends who suffered and died at the hands of violent guards at the camp. Nurul (Amin) and I are among the fortunate ones to have managed to escape,” he said.

Police found 106 bodies of human trafficking victims at the transit camps at Wang Kelian and 99 had been given proper burial at the Pokok Sena Khairiah cemetery.
Source : bernama

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