rohingya crisis deepens refugee camps transform into militant recruitment grounds
The biggest refugee concentration centre in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, is gradually transforming into a theatre of civil strife as the Rohingya refugees fight in Myanmar with thousands of them across the border. They claimed that for the period starting early 2024, the groups have been able to mobilize between 3000 and 5000 fighters some of which were just 13 years of age. This advancement heaps up another phase of persecution of Rohingya who fled Myanmar in 2016-17 after the United Nations labelled it as genocide.
In Myanmar, the Rohingya have faced systematic discrimination for over five decades and not been regarded as citizens even if they are proven to be the original settlers of Myanmar. The current military junta takes advantage of this weakness by providing citizenship cards coupled with financial rewards for the recruits. The recruitment drives documented by aid agencies show that refugees are coerced into joining and are promised fake opportunities they can’t get anywhere else given that they are refugees who can’t legally work or go to school.
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Inter NSK humanitarian non-governmental organizations stated that most of the recruits are kidnapped including the children. The military’s strategies for countering Rohingya fighters involve abducting Rohingya fighters and placing them next to the same oppressors accused of previous cruelty, to entangle these fighters in a web of psychological warfare. The situation does depict the recipe for exploitation that this persecuted community has to face continually.
Violence in camps in Cox’s Bazar has scaled up and armed groups have killed at least 60 people this year. The Norwegian Refugee Council says there is a looming funding crisis while people like Sharit Ullah survive on essentials. These camps originally built as temporary structures are now homes for several generations born and raised in the camps without citizenship, poverty-stricken.
The camp residents are confined to their camps, have little or no access to schools, and are provided with very poor health care. These camps have turned into breeding factories since over three thousand children are born in such severe conditions each year. The problems of poverty, lack of work, and rising violence contribute to the increase in the number of militants so that human rights are violated.