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page 73
justified its intervention by stating that the worshippers had broken the
seals placed on the doors of the mosque, encircled it with cannons and fired
at the crowd with heavy machine guns. Soldiers are also said to have thrown
grenades inside the building.
According to the sources, there appears to be a government policy of
moving non-Muslim Burmese into northern Rakhine State in an effort to displace
the people the government calls ’foreigners’. Muslims are said to have been
virtually prisoners of their provinces since 1964, not being allowed to travel
even between villages within a single township. The population transfers are
said to have intensified the persecution of Muslims. The following specific
cases were brought to the attention of the Special Rapporteur:
Abdul Shokur, 50, a watchmaker, part-time farmer and village teacher of
Islam from Kandaung village, Buthidaung township, stated that before May 1990,
pressure on Muslims used to be sporadic. Every Muslim had an identity card
which designated him or her as a ’foreigner’ without Burmese citizenship. No
Muslim could travel without a permit, especially to Rangoon. The fee for
obtaining a permit was 4,000 to 5,000 Denga (US$600 to 750), or 10 times the
average monthly salary in Akyab District. Muslims were frequently told they
were not Burmese but from Bangladesh. The persecution of Muslims is said to
have become commonplace after the May 1990 elections. Mosques were at first
locked up, and then destroyed throughout the area with forced Muslim labour,
and Buddhist temples were reportedly built in their place. Agricultural land
was confiscated from Muslims for military use or distributed to non-Muslims in
housing projects built with forced Muslim labour. About 150 Muslim homes in
Kandaung village were expropriated in favour of non-Muslims and 150 new
buildings were built to house the newcomers. Non-Muslim newcomers reportedly
received one cow, land, as well as military and agricultural training. The
military training of civilians, including the use of arms, increased the level
of abuse against the Muslims, as they frequently joined soldiers in beating
and looting. Random harassment of Muslims increased as well. Abdul Shokur
further reported that one day soldiers discovered him teaching the Koran to
children. They ridiculed him, threw the book on the ground and stomped it
with their boots. It was at this point that he decided to flee to Bangladesh
with his family.
Abdul Salam, 25, from Kandaung village, Buthidaung township, reported
that a housing project for urban non-Muslims had been built during 1991 on
Muslim land by forced labour in which he had taken part. Soldiers and
non-Muslim civilians had also abducted Muslim men to train the newcomers in
agricultural activities, in much the same way forced labour crews were
collected for road construction. He reported that non-Muslim civilians were
provided with military training and weapons, which prompted the random
harassment, bullying and beating of Muslims.
Nurul Eslam, 20, a student of Islam from Kuansibaung village, Maungdaw
township, reported that in March 1991, all Islamic schools in his village were
closed, on orders ’from above’, according to the soldiers. Harassment by
troops included orders for all Muslims to get out of Burma and ’go back’ to
Bangladesh.