Military forces raid secret Rohingya ‘terrorist training camps’

Several guns and wooden sticks that the insurgents reportedly use for practice were also found in the tunnels. Photo: Facebook / State Counsellor Office Information Committee
Several guns and wooden sticks that the insurgents reportedly use for practice were also found in the tunnels. Photo: Facebook / State Counsellor Office Information Committee

Myanmar security forces have killed three people in raids on “terrorist” training camps run by Rohingya Muslim militants in the north of Rakhine state, state-run Global New Light of Myanmar reported today.

Guns, ammunition and gunpowder were found at the camps in the Mayu Mountains, part of a remote strip of land on the northwest border that is mainly home to the persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority. The camps were also allegedly run by the same group that carried out the October raids that killed nine policemen, according to GNLM.

The report said security forces killed three “armed attackers in self-defense” during the two-day clearance operation, which was launched after they received a tip off the militants were training inside a secret tunnel at night.

The militants, now called the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), were subsidized by “foreign monetary aids” and spent months training recruits in martial arts and the use of light weapons, according to the government report.

The report also blamed the “terrorists” for a recent spate of murders of villagers and local community leaders that has seen 34 people killed and 22 abducted.

The ARSA has denied killing any civilians, saying it is fighting for the political rights of the oppressed Rohingya.

More than 70,000 Rohingya have fled the area to nearby Bangladesh since October, when Myanmar security forces launched a brutal crackdown in response to militant attacks on police posts.

Rohingya escapees have told harrowing accounts of security officers slaughtering babies, burning people alive and staging gang rapes — abuses UN investigators said may amount to crimes against humanity.

Myanmar denies the accusations and says troops were conducting valid clearance operations to crush a Rohingya insurgency. Nonetheless, the government has refused to allow in a UN fact-finding mission to investigate the claims.

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