YANGON, Aug 25: At least five police and
seven Rohingya Muslim insurgents were killed overnight in Myanmar's Rakhine
state, the government said on Friday morning, after militants staged
coordinated attacks on 24 police posts and tried breaking into an army base.
The attacks mark a dramatic escalation in a conflict simmering in Rakhine since
last October, when similar attacks that killed nine police prompted a massive
military counter-offensive beset by allegations of killings, rape and arson.
The military operation then resulted in some 87,000 Rohingya fleeing to
Bangladesh and the United Nations accused Myanmar's security forces of likely
committing crimes against humanity. The situation in the state deteriorated
again early this month when security forces began a new "clearance
operation" with tension shifting to the township of Rathetaung, where
Buddhist Rakhine and Rohingya communities live side-by-side. "The initial
information is that at least five policemen were killed, two guns have been
taken (from the police) and seven dead bodies of extremist Bengali insurgents
have been seized," said information committee affiliated with the office
of country leader Aung San Suu Kyi. The statement used the derogatory term
"Bengali" to describe the Rohingya which implies they are illegal
immigrants from Bangladesh. "The extremist Bengali insurgents attacked a
police station in Maungdaw region in northern Rakhine state with a handmade
bomb explosive and held coordinated attacks on several police posts at 1
a.m.," said the statement. It listed the names of 24 police posts that had
come under attack, adding that the police and the military were continuing
their fight against the insurgents at the time of the release. The statement also
said some 150 Rohingya men attempted to break into a military base, prompting
the military to fight back. The attacks took place a day after a panel led by
the former U.N. chief Kofi Annan finished its one-year research to advise Suu
Kyi's government on long-term solutions for the violence-riven, ethnically and
religiously divided state. In its statement Annan's team said Myanmar should
respond to a crisis over its Muslim Rohingya community in a
"calibrated" way without excessive force, adding that radicalisation
was a danger if problems were not addressed. The Rohingya are denied
citizenship and classified as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, despite
claiming roots in the region that go back centuries, with communities
marginalized and occasionally subjected to communal violence. REUTERS
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