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Is the Burmese Military Keeping Rohingya Women as Sex Slaves?

During my week in Sittwe, Burma, with the help of those who accompanied me, I obtained evidence that strongly implies that the Burmese military is imprisoning Rohingya women from the Arakhan region and using them as sex slaves.

A military camp a few miles from Sittwe, Burma.

Burma's Muslims are still having a pretty awful time of it. Last year, the country's Buddhist majority launched a series of attacks on the minority Rohingya Muslim population, supposedly because they're not "ethnically pure." The attacks have continued this year, and now the general Muslim population, not just the ethnic Rohingyas, are getting their homes burned down and heads smashed in by marauding gangs of vicious Buddhists.

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After monitoring the plight of the Rohingya and incidents of violence against them in June and October last year, I decided to fly out to Burma, anticipating another round of trouble. The problem was, I had no money, no commission, no media organization backing me, and the mainstream media had pretty much stopped reporting on the issue. When I turned to the public to help fund my trip, the response was overwhelming (turns out people do have an interest in helping expose the violent persecution of vulnerable minorities) and they collectively helped me raise enough money to go.

I stayed in Sittwe, the main city in Arakhan state, which is where the majority of the Rohingya camps are situated. Travelling past the police checkpoints every morning and into the Rohingya camps, I felt like I was being transported into a parallel world where it's fine to forget about your obligations as a human, where it's OK to bully a group of people just because they originally come from somewhere different than you. The Rohingya Muslims aren't recognized as citizens of Burma, meaning they have no rights and very little access to education and healthcare.

A Rohingya boy at an unregistered internally displaced person camp in Arakhan.

While in Sittwe, some of my contacts told me about Rohingya women being kept against their will at a military base. I tracked down some of the eyewitnesses, but I needed to get close to the camp to confirm what I'd heard. Bear in mind that taking pictures and video of a Burmese military base obviously isn't something to be taken lightly, and the people who'd agreed to take me there risked their lives if they were caught.

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During my week in Sittwe, with the help of those who accompanied me, I obtained evidence that strongly implies that the Burmese military is imprisoning Rohingya women from the Arakhan region and using them as sex slaves. That evidence has been passed on to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), a United Nations agency, which has lodged a complaint to the Burmese government and launched an investigation in an attempt to rescue the women.

Eyewitness testimony of a military camp situated a few miles from the town of Sittwe described around 20 women and three children under the age of eight being held at the camp. One of the witnesses, a Muslim who I'll call Amina, described walking past the camp when she heard voices calling out to her. The imprisoned women asked Amina if she was Muslim, then pleaded for help:

“If you can help us escape from here you will go to jannah ('heaven'),” one woman told her. “Many military men come, we can’t breathe. We want to become Muslim again. If we stay like this we will go to hell.” The meaning behind her words was clear: these women are being raped, and they don’t have to say it explicitly for anyone to understand what's taking place.

The prisoners asked Amina to pass the message on to someone who could help. “Our parents can't find us,” they added.

A Rohingya woman at a medical clinic. Photo by Dougal Thomas

The women only managed to speak to Amina because it was Burmese Independence Day and the soldiers were away. “We've been arrested here for quite a long time now. They have left us today because they have a special visitor,” they told Amina. The women continued, telling Amina that if the word about them spread too much, the military would kill them. They also warned her that she was at risk of being killed herself if she was spotted talking to them.

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Amina saw three children inside the camp. Two of them popped their heads up on the windowsills and one came up to the fence so that Amina could pass through some vegetables she'd collected. “The women were crying," she told me. "Some of them called me daughter, others called me sister.” Some of the women were clearly pregnant.

Information relayed from various sources indicates that local villagers are aware that women are being kept as prisoners but are too scared to speak out. And as Rohingya aren't recognised as citizens of Burma—and therefore have no rights—it's fair to assume that the punishment inflicted on them for making these kinds of allegations wouldn't exactly go through official judicial channels.

A Rohingya home, burnt to the ground in Arakhan. Photo by Spike Johnson

An 18-year-old Rohingya man I interviewed described another camp 20 minutes away, where another woman was apparently being held under similar conditions. He was one of around 14 rice-paddy workers who went to speak Rakhine, the language spoken by the Buddhist population of Arakhan, with the woman. The woman replied, “Don’t speak Rakhine with me any more. I am Muslim and a prisoner here.”

She then told the men her father's name and where she was from. They asked her what she was doing at a military camp if she was Muslim, and if she was ready to come with them. She replied, “I have two children,” implying that her children are being used to keep her at the camp. This evidence has also been passed on to the ILO.

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I tracked down other eyewitnesses, but they were mostly too afraid to speak. One woman who'd seen the women imprisoned at the first camp initially agreed to speak to me, but backed out after her husband threatened to divorce her if she spoke to any journalists about the situation. The Rohingya have no rights or official form of protection, and those who do speak to journalists are risking their lives, so the reluctance to divulge what they know is perfectly understandable.

The last known sighting of these women was at the end of March, and it's uncertain whether they're still alive. It's also uncertain if the women are still at the camp or have been split up into different camps. But what is certain is that there are innocent Rohingya women being held captive by the Burmese military and plenty of locals know about it, only it's impossible for them to do anything about it without risking their lives.

Follow Assed on Twitter: @AssedBaig

More stuff about Burma and the Rohingya:

Is Burma's Anti-Muslim Violence Led by "Buddhist Neo-Nazis"?

The Rohingya Movement, as Seen by a Journalist in Burma

Anonymous Taught Twitter About the Rohingya Genocide