Arakan News Agency
Despite government promises to uphold human rights, sources tells IRIN military abuses continued in May
Myanmar security forces allegedly raped as many as 13 women during “clearance” operations following an explosion in May that was reportedly detonated by source insurgents, according to rights groups and witnesses.
Activists and witnesses tell IRIN that the assaults took place in Buthidaung Township in Arakan, a western state where security forces are accused of abuses against minority ethnic Rohingya Muslims. The UN estimates that about 75,000 Rohingya fled to neighbouring Bangladesh after the military launched counterinsurgency operations following deadly attacks on border police posts last October by a new group calling itself the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army.
During those clearance operations, soldiers allegedly raped between five and 13 women on 9 and 10 May, according to Chris Lewa of the Arakan Project, an advocacy group with an extensive network of contacts in Arakan State, where most of Myanmar’s approximately one million Rohingya live.
“Our sources say this occurred in north Buthidaung Township following an explosion, which was attributed to the insurgency,” she said. “It seems this was retaliatory.”
Andrew Dusek, a spokesman for the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said the UN has received reports of this and several other “concerning allegations of such incidents” in Arakan during the past few months.
“They have been brought to the attention of the government,” he said.







