By Phelim Kine and Ranit Mishori, MD, MHS
June 28, 2019
June 28, 2019
Article
On the eve of the second anniversary of the August 2017 campaign of extreme violence by Myanmar security forces against Rohingya civilians in northern Rakhine state, the experiences of “Chesa” and Chit” (not their real names) recall the brutality of that campaign.
“Chesa,” a 60-year-old Rohingya woman, and “Chit,” her 20-year-old daughter, were interviewed by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) investigators in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh last year and recounted how, in September 2017, security forces entered their village and forced Chit’s 20-year-old pregnant cousin and her husband into a field. They killed the husband immediately and then raped the cousin, after which they mutilated her breasts with a knife and killed her.
“Chesa,” a 60-year-old Rohingya woman, and “Chit,” her 20-year-old daughter, were interviewed by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) investigators in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh last year and recounted how, in September 2017, security forces entered their village and forced Chit’s 20-year-old pregnant cousin and her husband into a field. They killed the husband immediately and then raped the cousin, after which they mutilated her breasts with a knife and killed her.