Conflict is raging between Rakhine Buddhists and Muslim minority groups in Rakhine, one of Myanmar's poorest states. In 2012 many Muslims, including Rohingya, were attacked by their neighbours and forced into government camps as their villages were destroyed. The latest outbreak of violence on Aug. 25 pushed hundreds of thousands of Rohingya into neighbouring Bangladesh. That number could soon reach 1 million as the world鈥檚 fastest growing humanitarian crisis continues.

It's unknown how many people remain in the camps as the 探花精选 and other humanitarian organisations have been blocked from them, and from the remaining Muslim communities in northern Rakhine, amid the latest waves of violence. We are gradually regaining access to our sites across the state鈥攂ut thousands of people are still out of the reach of aid as the conflict continues and access remains extremely difficult.


We recently interviewed several Sittwe camp residents, who face dire health conditions and widespread violence against women in the crowded camps. For their protection, we are not providing their photos or real names.

Daw Phyu Ma

Daw Phyu Ma remembers fleeing her home in June 2012 like it was yesterday.

鈥淚 had to leave my disabled daughter behind,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 cried every step of the way.鈥 Widowed in 2011, this mother of four had no one to help carry her adult daughter.

After five hours of walking, Phyu Ma and her children arrived at a camp in the dark. They were ushered to a 鈥渢emporary鈥 one-room hut.

Phyu Ma asked every person she met if anyone had seen her disabled daughter. One month later her daughter was found in another camp. Her hands were tied together and, unable to eat, she had become excruciatingly thin. Without any ability to speak, her daughter used sign language to say 鈥渟ad鈥 as she described her pain.

Almost six years later, Phyu Ma and her children are still living in the one-room hut and waiting for any sign that they can return home.

Myo Zaw

Many women live in fear, knowing that security guards at the camp may not be able to protect them if Rakhine mobs invade.

鈥淲e do not feel safe here,鈥 says Myo Zaw. 鈥淭he government cannot guarantee there will be no violence or terrorism here. I have even seen children and adults shot. It might happen again.鈥 

Discrimination already impacts every aspect of this woman鈥檚 life. Even though she identifies as Kaman, a legal ethnicity recognised in Myanmar, she is denied citizenship because she has ancestor who married a Muslim who identifies as Rohingya.

鈥淒iscrimination renders us powerless and fearful as a minority group,鈥 she says. We are accused of being migrants yet we have evidence that my family have been living in Myanmar for many generations.鈥

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Many women live in fear in the Sittwe camps, knowing that the security guards may not be able to protect them if they are attacked
Photo: 探花精选

U Maung Hla

U Maung Hla, 57, is a former businessman who was forced to leave his home, his construction business and a plot of land full of fruit trees that he had saved all his life to buy.

鈥淚t is not possible to own land again,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y family鈥檚 only future is to live in a settlement and shelter arranged by the government, but there is no guarantee that anything will ever be our own again.鈥 

 

Maung Hla is also struggling to care for his brother, who had a stroke after being prescribed the wrong medicine. He doesn鈥檛 know if he can take him to Sittwe hospital because it is run by the Rakhine community.

鈥淚f we go to Sittwe Hospital, most patients die. Is this intended? Is it real or is it a rumour?鈥 he wonders. 鈥淲e are afraid to go there. We have lost trust.鈥

Mar Lar

鈥淟iving here is like being a chicken in a cage,鈥 says 19-year-old Mar Lar of her Sittwe camp. 鈥淲e have no freedom of movement and no privacy. There is no place to feel happy.鈥 

Safety and security, especially at night is Mar Lar鈥檚 greatest worry. Women have to walk through a field in the dark in order to use the latrine.

鈥淚t is not safe for women and girls to go to the toilet alone at night,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ome men drink and use drugs around the latrine, because there is no electricity. It is a very dark place for men to gather.鈥

To learn how to keep herself safe, Mar Lar joined an 探花精选 women鈥檚 group.

鈥淭he girls in my group help each other,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e always accompany each other to the toilet and we offer mutual support.鈥

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The 探花精选 is responding to dire health conditions and widespread violence against women in the crowded camps in Sittwe.
Photo: 探花精选

Maung Maung

Maung Maung, 19, has already seen too much violence.

When Rakhine came to his community, they burned homes and threw firebombs. 鈥淢any people were elderly, injured, sick and disabled,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hose who couldn鈥檛 walk were carried in longyis (long skirts) on the backs of relatives.鈥 

Unable to assist then, Maung Maung wants to assist now. He joined the 探花精选 program to address violence against women and girls. He helps fellow refugees by sharing his newly learned communications skills, and his understanding of ways to change violent  behaviour.

Still, he knows he will never return to the life he once had.

鈥淢y family had been living here for seven generations, but all our documentation was left,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e thought our move was temporary and the government would return us to our original place.鈥

A long road ahead

Tens of thousands of Rohingya continue to face enormous humanitarian need鈥攚hether trapped in Rakhine state with scarce assistance or as refugees in Bangladesh with unclear prospects. It鈥檚 a crisis that won't end unless Muslim minorities' rights are recognised and protected in Myanmar.