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Body of evidence: Rohingya scars testify to Myanmar crackdown

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Rohingya refugee Mohammad Sikander felt a flash of pain as a bullet -- fired by a Myanmar soldier -- tore into his shoulder.

Myanmar says its military operations in Sikander's home state of Rakhine last August were an effort to root out terrorists who had targeted police officers.

But the scars and disfigured skin of Rohingya civilians -- men, women and children -- tell a different story.

"It was a soldier who shot me," Sikander, 37, recounted almost a year after Myanmar security forces stormed his village of Yae Twin Kyun, in Muangdaw district, on September 1.

Rohingya refugee Minara  8  cannot walk properly after being shot in the back of the knee
Rohingya refugee Minara, 8, cannot walk properly after being shot in the back of the knee
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

On the back of his right shoulder is a large scar, round and concave, a thumb-sized gouge of flesh taken from his body.

"I'm still in pain, I take medicine from the clinic [for it]," he told AFP. "I can't lift heavy things."

Sikander is one of the more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims -- a minority from Myanmar long considered outsiders and denied citizenship -- expelled almost a year ago when security forces launched "clearance operations" after rebel attacks.

Kabir Ahmed  60  has been left with an arrow-shaped scar on his shoulder after a bullet tore his fle...
Kabir Ahmed, 60, has been left with an arrow-shaped scar on his shoulder after a bullet tore his flesh
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

Today, he lives across the border in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district, where refugee camps hold more than a million Rohingya.

Those who made it to Bangladesh have recounted rape, extrajudicial killings and the razing of entire villages.

Myanmar has denied accusations of atrocities -- apart from a solitary massacre in the village of Inn Din.

Mohammad Haroon  28  has trouble breathing after being hit at the top of his spine by a bullet
Mohammad Haroon, 28, has trouble breathing after being hit at the top of his spine by a bullet
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

It insists its operations were proportionate responses targeting Rohingya militants.

But the violence written on the bodies of refugees speaks otherwise.

A round tore through 60-year-old Kabir Ahmed's left shoulder as he fled, leaving a pink arrow-shaped scar.

There is the line of gnarled flesh under the bend of eight-year-old Minara's knee, where she was shot at home in Rakhine.

Mohammed Sultan  30  went blind after a bullet pierced his right temple and severed his optical nerv...
Mohammed Sultan, 30, went blind after a bullet pierced his right temple and severed his optical nerve
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

Mohammad Haroon, 28, has a gash at the top of his spine where a bullet hit him as he was trying to cross the border.

Aid group Doctors Without Borders says it has treated more than 2,600 patients for injuries from bullets, knives and burns.

The figure does not include women subjected to sexual violence.

Many of the wounds have an enduring physical impact.

Minara can't walk properly and Haroon has trouble breathing.

Mohammed Sultan, 30, went blind after a bullet pierced his right temple and severed his optical nerves.

But his brother fared worse.

"One of my brothers came to rescue me, but he was shot in the back, and he died," he said.

Rohingya refugee Mohammad Sikander felt a flash of pain as a bullet — fired by a Myanmar soldier — tore into his shoulder.

Myanmar says its military operations in Sikander’s home state of Rakhine last August were an effort to root out terrorists who had targeted police officers.

But the scars and disfigured skin of Rohingya civilians — men, women and children — tell a different story.

“It was a soldier who shot me,” Sikander, 37, recounted almost a year after Myanmar security forces stormed his village of Yae Twin Kyun, in Muangdaw district, on September 1.

Rohingya refugee Minara  8  cannot walk properly after being shot in the back of the knee

Rohingya refugee Minara, 8, cannot walk properly after being shot in the back of the knee
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

On the back of his right shoulder is a large scar, round and concave, a thumb-sized gouge of flesh taken from his body.

“I’m still in pain, I take medicine from the clinic [for it],” he told AFP. “I can’t lift heavy things.”

Sikander is one of the more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims — a minority from Myanmar long considered outsiders and denied citizenship — expelled almost a year ago when security forces launched “clearance operations” after rebel attacks.

Kabir Ahmed  60  has been left with an arrow-shaped scar on his shoulder after a bullet tore his fle...

Kabir Ahmed, 60, has been left with an arrow-shaped scar on his shoulder after a bullet tore his flesh
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

Today, he lives across the border in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district, where refugee camps hold more than a million Rohingya.

Those who made it to Bangladesh have recounted rape, extrajudicial killings and the razing of entire villages.

Myanmar has denied accusations of atrocities — apart from a solitary massacre in the village of Inn Din.

Mohammad Haroon  28  has trouble breathing after being hit at the top of his spine by a bullet

Mohammad Haroon, 28, has trouble breathing after being hit at the top of his spine by a bullet
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

It insists its operations were proportionate responses targeting Rohingya militants.

But the violence written on the bodies of refugees speaks otherwise.

A round tore through 60-year-old Kabir Ahmed’s left shoulder as he fled, leaving a pink arrow-shaped scar.

There is the line of gnarled flesh under the bend of eight-year-old Minara’s knee, where she was shot at home in Rakhine.

Mohammed Sultan  30  went blind after a bullet pierced his right temple and severed his optical nerv...

Mohammed Sultan, 30, went blind after a bullet pierced his right temple and severed his optical nerve
Chandan KHANNA, AFP

Mohammad Haroon, 28, has a gash at the top of his spine where a bullet hit him as he was trying to cross the border.

Aid group Doctors Without Borders says it has treated more than 2,600 patients for injuries from bullets, knives and burns.

The figure does not include women subjected to sexual violence.

Many of the wounds have an enduring physical impact.

Minara can’t walk properly and Haroon has trouble breathing.

Mohammed Sultan, 30, went blind after a bullet pierced his right temple and severed his optical nerves.

But his brother fared worse.

“One of my brothers came to rescue me, but he was shot in the back, and he died,” he said.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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