COX’S BAZAR, Banglades: A suspected land mine planted near the Bangladesh border has killed three Rohingya villagers fleeing violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, a Bangladesh border official quoted a survivor as saying.
Border Guard Bangladesh commander Lt. Col. Manzurul Hasan Khan told AFP that troops had heard the blast Saturday night about 100 meters from the border.
“We learnt from the injured survivor that they were four of them. The survivor said the other three died on the spot in an explosion — likely an anti-personnel mine,” Khan told AFP.
He said border guards saw the survivor coming to the demarcation line with multiple injuries to his body and face.
Another Rohingya was injured by a suspected mine in the same place after he had returned to his village to retrieve his cows and bring them to Bangladesh.
Last week two Rohingya including a child had their legs blown off and another person was injured after they stepped onto suspected mines near the border
Bangladesh on Wednesday summoned Myanmar’s ambassador to protest at the planting of land mines along the border.
Aid groups and Bangladesh government officials say they have been planted to deter fleeing members of the minority Rohingya community from returning to Myanmar.
It is the second time Dhaka has summoned the ambassador since an upsurge of violence in Rakhine state triggered a refugee crisis, with 294,000 people flooding across the border since August 25.
Amnesty International said Saturday that Myanmar security forces planted the mines, which are banned internationally.
Based on interviews with witnesses and analysis by its experts, Amnesty said there appeared to be a targeted use of land mines along a narrow stretch of the northwestern border with Rakhine state.
“This is another low in what is already a horrific situation in Rakhine state,” said Tirana Hassan, Amnesty’s Crisis Response Director, who is currently near the border.
“The Myanmar military’s callous use of inherently indiscriminate and deadly weapons at highly trafficked paths around the border is putting the lives of ordinary people at enormous risk,” she added.
Three Rohingya reported killed by suspected mine in Myanmar
Three Rohingya reported killed by suspected mine in Myanmar
Dutch police say probing Rotterdam synagogue fire
- Dutch police on Friday said they were investigating a fire that erupted in a synagogue in Rotterdam overnight, without resulting in any injuries
AMSTERDAM: Dutch police on Friday said they were investigating a fire that erupted in a synagogue in Rotterdam overnight, without resulting in any injuries.
“The fire burned for a short moment before going out on its own. No one was injured,” the police said on social media of the blaze that erupted at 3:40 am (0240 GMT) at a synagogue on A.B.N. Davidplein.
An unverified video showing an explosion near a building resembling the targeted synagogue circulated on social media on Friday, which police were using in their probe.
“There is no place in Rotterdam for antisemitism, intimidation, violence or hatred toward religious communities,” city mayor Carola Schouten told Dutch news agency ANP.
Scouten said the incident had caused “a great deal of anxiety among our Jewish fellow citizens.”
On Monday, an explosion shook a synagogue in the Belgian city of Liege before dawn, causing material damage but no injuries.
It was strongly condemned by Belgian politicians and European Union officials.
“The fire burned for a short moment before going out on its own. No one was injured,” the police said on social media of the blaze that erupted at 3:40 am (0240 GMT) at a synagogue on A.B.N. Davidplein.
An unverified video showing an explosion near a building resembling the targeted synagogue circulated on social media on Friday, which police were using in their probe.
“There is no place in Rotterdam for antisemitism, intimidation, violence or hatred toward religious communities,” city mayor Carola Schouten told Dutch news agency ANP.
Scouten said the incident had caused “a great deal of anxiety among our Jewish fellow citizens.”
On Monday, an explosion shook a synagogue in the Belgian city of Liege before dawn, causing material damage but no injuries.
It was strongly condemned by Belgian politicians and European Union officials.
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