Dhaka: Bangladesh’s foreign minister AK Abdul Memon vowed “stern action” against the killers of Rohingya refugee leader Mohib Ullah as calls grew to investigate his shooting.
Mohib Ullah was killed by unknown gunmen in a camp in Cox’s Bazar on Wednesday night. He led one of the largest community groups to emerge since more than 730,000 Rohingya Muslims fled Myanmar after a military crackdown in August 2017.”The government will take stern action against those who were involved in the killing. No one will be spared,” Foreign Minister said in his first statement since the killing.
Momen further said “vested” interests were responsible for the killing of Mohib Ullah as he wanted to return to Myanmar. “The killers of Mohib Ullah must be brought to justice.” Authorities arrested three refugees in the killing of Mohib Ullah, said Naimul Huq, a police official in Cox’s Bazar, gave no further details. Mohib Ullah advocated for the Rohingya to return to Myanmar with rights they were denied during decades of persecution.
He was the leader of the Arakan Rohingya Society for Peace and Human Rights, founded in 2017 to document atrocities against Rohingya in their native Myanmar and give them a voice in international talks about their future. But his high profile made him a target of hardliners and he received death threats, he told Reuters in 2019. “If I die, I’m fine. I will give my life,”he said on that time.
The killing of Mohib ignited anger in the camps, the world’s largest refugee settlement, where some residents interviewed by Reuters say the killing is the latest evidence of mounting violence as armed gangs and extremists vie for power. In a video circulated on social media, his brother, Habib Ullah, who said he witnessed the shooting, blamed the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, an armed group active in the camps.
“They killed him as he is the leader and all Rohingya abide by him,” Habib Ullah said. Before opening fire, “They said he cannot be a leader of Rohingya and there cannot be any leaders for Rohingya,” he said.
His account could not independently be verified. ARSA said in a post on Twitter on Friday that it was “shocked and saddened” by the killing and decried “finger-pointing with baseless and hearsay accusations”.
More than a million Rohingya live in the camps, the vast majority having fled neighbouring Myanmar during a military crackdown in 2007 that the United Nations has said was carried out with genocidal intent.
Myanmar denies committing genocide, saying it was waging a legitimate campaign against insurgents who attacked police posts.
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