Bangladesh Targets Rohingya Refugee Profiteers as Crisis Deepens

W460

Bangladeshi boat operators are exploiting Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence in Myanmar by demanding up to $100 for ferry trips that usually cost 50 cents, as a humanitarian crisis that has sparked international condemnation showed no sign of abating Thursday.

Some 380,000 Rohingya have fled across the border since late August and there have been growing appeals for Myanmar's leader Aung San Suu Kyi to speak out in their defence.

Many have trekked across hills and through jungles for days to reach the border only to be faced with hugely inflated prices for a seat on a boat crossing the Naf river that divides the two countries.

Bangladeshi magistrates operating mobile courts in the border town of Cox's Bazar and nearby districts have now started sentencing boat owners and local villagers to terms of up to six months in prison, officials said Thursday.

"So far we have convicted some 150 people," Zahid Hossain Siddique, government administrator for the border town of Teknaf, told AFP.

"Many of these people were sentenced to six months in jail after they were convicted on the spot," he added, without giving a precise figure for the numbers imprisoned.

An AFP correspondent at the river said boat owners were charging refugees up to $100 for a 10-30 minute trip that would normally cost less than 50 cents -- a mark-up of 200 times.

"The boatman extracted every last penny from us for the ferry. Now we want to go to the camp but don't have any money," Momena Begum, 35, a Rohingya mother of five, told AFP.

She sat with her children beside a highway running along the beach at Teknaf, unable to get a ride to the refugee camps some 10 kilometres (six miles) from the border.

"The boatmen threatened to throw us into the sea if we refused to give them our valuables," said Nadera Banu, 19, who got married only last year is already a widow.

"I gave up the final memento of my husband, a gold locket given on my wedding day, to escape," she said.

Media reports have mentioned Rohingya being held by boatmen and agents for hours in coastal villages until they received inflated payments for the trip.

Rohingya living in established refugee camps in Bangladesh have also been accused of joining the profiteering.

The influx has left Bangladesh struggling to provide relief for exhausted and hungry refugees -- some 60 percent of whom are children.

- Breaking the silence -The crisis, which began when Myanmar launched a military crackdown on August 25, has sparked international alarm, with the UN Security Council on Wednesday breaking its weeks-long silence and calling for an end to the violence.

UN chief Antonio Guterres said the military campaign, which came in response to attacks by Rohingya militants, amounted to ethnic cleansing.

The 15-member council expressed concern about the security operations in Rakhine state and called for "immediate steps" to end the violence.

It was the first time the council agreed on a united response to the crisis.

The 1.1-million-strong Rohingya have suffered years of discrimination in Myanmar, where they are denied citizenship even though many have longstanding roots in the country.

Suu Kyi's spokesman has said she will not attend next week's annual meeting of world leaders at the United Nations, where the plight of the Rohingya will be in the spotlight.

He said the Nobel laureate and long-time human rights champion, who has been condemned for a lack of moral leadership and compassion in resolving the crisis, will deliver an address next week on peace and reconciliation in Myanmar.

Suu Kyi, Myanmar's first civilian leader in decades, has no control over the powerful military, which ran the country for 50 years.

There is also scant sympathy among Myanmar's Buddhist majority for the Rohingya, who are commonly branded "Bengalis" -- shorthand for illegal immigrants.

Rohingya arriving in Bangladesh have told chilling accounts of soldiers firing on civilians and razing entire villages in the north of Rakhine with the help of Buddhist mobs.

The army denies the allegations.

Twelve Nobel laureates have signed an open letter urging the UN body to "intervene immediately by using all available means" to end the "crimes against humanity" unfolding in Rakhine.

The Rohingya militants whose raids provoked last month's crackdown meanwhile denied any links to global terror groups, days after Al-Qaeda urged Muslims to rally to their cause.

The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) says it is trying to defend the minority group from a long campaign of persecution.

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