More than 18,000 Rohingya muslims have fled to Bangladesh since fighting erupted in Myanmar's Rakhine state last week. Thousands more remain stuck in no man's land between borders.
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Bangladeshi authorities have toughened border patrols in a bid to prevent more Rohingyas from entering a country that already hosts an estimated 400,000 Rohingya refugees.
At least 18,500 Rohingyas, mostly women and children, have registered in Bangladesh, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Wednesday. An attack by Rohingya insurgents on security forces in northern Rakhine had triggered the mass exodus.
"They are in a very, very desperate condition," said Sanjukta Sahany, who runs the IOM office in the southern Bangladeshi town of Cox's Bazar near the border.
"The biggest needs are food, health services and they need shelter. They need at least some cover, some roofs over their heads."
Sahany said many crossed "with bullet injuries and burn injuries," and that aid workers reported that some refugees "gave a blank look" when questioned. "People are traumatised, which is quite visible."
The flight of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar to Bangladesh
Rohingya Muslims fleeing from fighting in Myanmar face attempts by Bangladesh authorities to send them home despite a UN appeal that they be allowed to stay. The Rohingya are classed as illegal immigrants in Myanmar.
Seeking refuge
A series of coordinated attacks by Rohingya insurgents on Myanmar security forces in the north of Myanmar's Rakhine State triggered a crackdown by Myanmar forces that has sent a stream of Rohingya villagers fleeing to Bangladesh. About 400 people have been killed in the clashes in Buddist-majority Myanmar.
Mass evacuation
A Rohingya man passes a child though a barbed wire border fence on the border with Bangladesh. Myanmar accused the Rohingya insurgents of torching seven villages, one outpost, and two parts of Maungdaw town.
Image: Getty Images/R.Asad
Buddhist refugees on their way south
The crackdown by Myanmar forces also sparked a mass evacuation of thousands of Buddhist residents of the area. Tension has long been high between the Rohingya Muslims and Rakhine Buddhists, leading to bloody rioting in 2012. Rakhine Buddhists, feeling unsafe after the upsurge in fighting, are moving south to the state's capital, Sittwe, where Buddhists are a majority and have greater security.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
No entry
Bangladeshi border guards block people from crossing. Thousands of Rohingyas have sought to flee the fighting to Bangladesh, with nearly 30,000 crossing over. Bangladesh, which is already host to more than 400,000 Rohingya said it will not accept any more refugees, despite an appeal by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres for Dhaka to allow Rohingya to seek safety.
Image: Reuters/M. Ponir Hossain
Humanitarian crisis
An aid worker with an international agency in Bangladesh reports: "What we're seeing is that many Rohingya people are sick. This is because they got stuck in the border before they could enter. It's mostly women and children." The Rohingya are denied citizenship in Myanmar and classified as illegal immigrants, despite claiming roots there that go back centuries.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M.Alam
Not welcome in Bangladesh
A group of Rohingya refugees takes shelter at the Kutuupalang makeshift refugee camp in Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh. Bangladesh's unwillingness to host more refugees became apparent in the government's plan to relocate Rohingyas to a remote island that is mostly flooded during the monsoon season.
Image: Reuters/M. P. Hossain
Stranded in no man's land
Rohingya children make their way through water as they try to come to the Bangladesh side from no man's land. Tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees are believed to be stuck at the border to Bangladesh.
Image: Reuters/M. Ponir Hossain
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UN appeals to Bangladesh
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday urged Myanmar and Bangladesh to allow humanitarian access to people impacted by the clashes in Rakhine.
Aid agencies should be granted "unfettered and free access to affected communities in need of assistance and protection," Guterres's spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, said in a statement on Monday.
The recent clashes between Myanmar security forces and Rohingya insurgents have killed at least 109 people – the majority of whom were insurgents, plus 12 members of Myanmar security forces and several citizens, the Myanmar military said.
The violence has prompted a large number of the Muslim minority and Buddhist civilians to flee in the northern part of the state into neighboring Bangladesh.
Following reports that Bangladeshi authorities had been forcibly returning Rohingya civilians, Guterres urged the Muslim-majority nation to allow them to seek safety.
"Recognizing that Bangladesh has hosted generously refugees from Myanmar for decades, the secretary-general appeals for the authorities to continue to allow the Rohingya fleeing violence to seek safety in Bangladesh;" the UN statement said.
Forgotten refugees: Rohingyas make a home in Bangladesh
More than 70,000 Rohingyas have fled Myanmar for Bangladesh since a crackdown began in October 2016. In total there are almost half a million such refugees in Bangladesh. They live in crowded camps such as Kutupalong.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Fleeing Myanmar
In October 2016, a Rohingya group was accused of killing nine policemen in Myanmar. Since then, the Muslim minority has been under attack in the mostly Buddhist country again. More than 70,000 Rohingyas have fled across the border to Bangladesh. One of the camps they live in is Kutupalong, in the southern Cox's Bazar district.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Self-reliance required
Rohingyas might be safe from Myanmar's military here, but life in the Kutupalong camp is anything but easy. There is no real infrastructure and only makeshift housing set up by the refugees themselves. They fled Myanmar because the military torched their homes and raped and killed hundreds of people, according to human rights organizations.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
No child's play
There's no running water in most parts of the camp and not much to do for the thousands of refugee children. This girl is picking up mud from one of the camp's lakes.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Living in shacks
Mud and other basic materials are used by to build houses in the camp so residents at least have roofs over their heads.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Long history of conflict
In Myanmar, Rohingyas have been discriminated against since before the country's independence from Britain in 1948. The group continues to be denied citizenship and voting rights.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Chased away yet again?
Rohingya also experience discrimination in Bangladesh, where the government has turned away boats with hundreds of refugees because it claims that the camps are already overcrowded. Now, Bangladesh's government is planning to relocate Rohingyas to a remote island that is mostly flooded during monsoon season.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Deserted on an island
The island of Thengar Char, where Bangladesh's government wants to settle Rohingyas, is miles away from the mainland, can only be reached by boat and has been raided by pirates before. An NGO coordinator helping Rohingyas once told DW that there would be few opportunities to make a living on Thengar Char.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Bad track record
Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali has acknowledged that there is still a lot of work to be done on Thengar Char. "'The relocation will take place only after the development activities are completed,'' he has said. But the government hasn't done much to improve the Kutupalong camp either, and residents have to take care of everything themselves.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
Erased from history
The lack of a safe homeland leaves Rohingyas with an uncertain future as Myanmar works to erase their past. The Culture and Religious Affairs Ministry plans to release a history textbook with no mention whatsoever of the Muslim minority. "The real truth is that the word 'Rohingya' was never used or existed as an ethnicity or race in Myanmar's history," the ministry claimed in December 2016.
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/T. Chowdhury
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Erdogan urges international aid
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called on the international community on Monday to do more to help the Rohingya minority, one of the world's largest stateless communities.
"Unfortunately I can say the world is blind and deaf to what is going on in Myanmar," Erdogan said in a television interview. "It does not hear and it does not see."
He described the current situation of refugees fleeing to Bangladesh as an "extremely painful event." Erdogan added that he will take up the issue at the UN General Assembly next month.
Myanmar's Suu Kyi under fire
The government of Myanmar's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi has drawn criticism from some of her counterparts in the West.
Around 1.1 million Muslim Rohingya currently living in mainly Buddhist Myanmar have been denied citizenship and are classified as illegal immigrants. The communities, which claim roots that go back for hundreds of years, are marginalized and subjected to violence.
Suu Kyi has condemned the attacks by insurgents and praised security forces. The Nobel peace laureate has also dismissed accusations of atrocities carried out against the Rohingya and denied visas to UN officials tasked with investigating the allegations.
In October, a similar series of insurgent attacks on police posts in Myanmar prompted a brutal military response that resulted in human rights abuse allegations.