“We heard explosions, gunfire and people screaming,” says Ruhul, describing the moment when his township, Buthidaung, was attacked on the evening of 17 May. “My family and I fled our home in the chaos, seeking safety in the nearby hills.”
“I became separated from my parents and spent several days hiding in the jungle with my cousins and other young people, in hunger and fear. I stepped on two landmines; the first time I was unharmed, but the second explosion blew my foot off.”
Ruhul, a young Rohingya man, who didn't receive medical care for nine days until he was able to cross the border into Bangladesh and reach a Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) hospital in Cox's Bazar.
Since November 2023, Myanmar’s northern Rakhine state has been devastated by intensifying conflict between the Myanmar Armed Forces and the Arakan Army. Extreme violence, including the use of heavy weaponry, drone strikes and arson attacks, has razed entire villages, killing, injuring and displacing civilians. Both sides to the conflict are forcibly recruiting civilians and stoking ethnic tensions between communities.
The violence is impacting various ethnic groups living in Rakhine, however as one of the most historically persecuted groups over decades, the Rohingya community often finds themselves caught in the middle of this violence.