Myanmar
Government led by Aung San Suu Kyi to impose curfew in five townships in Arakan
on the ground of ongoing clashes between the Arakan Army and Myanmar Army on
2.3.2019. Therefore, partnership with cruel war criminal Myanmar Army,
Government of Myanmar led by Aung San Suu Kyi imposed a curfew in line along
with section 144 in five townships in northern Arakan.
In northern
Arakan, there are (30000) internally displaced persons who had to flee
from their
village to IDPs camps because of notorious Myanmar Army’s killing, persecuting
and threatening. Myanmar Army shelled every village in northern Arakan on the
accusation of being tied with Arakan Army and raiding every village in daylight
hours.
Shooting, looting and abducting villagers, Myanmar Army used to commit
war crime in Arakan. Now, they have more opportunity
to commit war crimes in the night also by imposing curfew in five townships.
Due to curfew,
no civilian can travel from village to village and within wards of towns in the
night. Myanmar Army can only move from place to place. Even if villagers suffer
from disease seriously at night, they cannot go to hospital and they are not provided
ambulance.
Even in daylight,
Myanmar Army has done arson to Arakanese villages and then they were killing, looting and abducting
Arakanese people. However, Myanmar Army falsified from its media to people by
giving misinformation that they did not commit anything.
If Myanmar Army set fire a village at night
after it imposed a curfew, no villager
of other villages will not be able to receive information in time correctly because villagers
cannot travel but only Myanmar Army can.
Oo Hla Saw, an ANP leader and Rakhine
National lawmaker who represents Mrauk-U in Myanmar’s lower house of
parliament, told RFA that local authorities did not state a reason for the curfew when
they announced it publicly in his township.
Arakan
Army(AA )spokesperson Khine Thukha said the curfew will pose difficulties for organizations
that are providing assistance to internally displaced persons (IDPs) and limit
their workers’ movement in the region.
“We think the move could lead to the worst instead of
advancing to peace,” he said. “The Myanmar Army has been sending reinforcements
both in weapons and manpower, so we can see signs that larger ‘rooting-out’
operations are underway following the curfew order.”