Asia | Five years on

The Rohingyas are being wiped out in slow motion

Conditions are dire for the Muslim minority group on both sides of the Myanmar-Bangladesh border

This photo taken on November 19, 2021 shows children wearing thanaka face make-up inside a camp for internally displaced people (IDPs) in Mrauk U in Myanmar's western Rakhine state. - TO GO WITH Myanmar-heritage-refugee, PHOTO ESSAY (Photo by AFP) / TO GO WITH Myanmar-heritage-refugee, PHOTO ESSAY (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)
|SINGAPORE

On a vacant patch of land in Sittwe, the capital of Rakhine state along the western flank of Myanmar, grass grows long under the hot sun. A house once stood on this plot, though all trace of it is long gone. Mohammed, a 36-year-old Rohingya man, grew up in that house and lived there until 2012, when he and his family were forced to flee by a band of ethnic Rakhines wielding sticks and torches. That summer mobs of Rakhine villagers and Burmese soldiers razed Rohingya villages and killed hundreds of people belonging to the long-persecuted Muslim minority group. Some 140,000 Rohingyas were displaced in the melee and herded into camps, where they have remained ever since.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Slow death”

Walkies

From the August 20th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Tsubasa Ito teaches his son Koya how to play baseball in Nagoya City, Japan

Fathers are doing more child care in East Asia

About time, too

A Saiga antelope walks on a prairie outside Almaty, Kazakhstan

Ice Age antelopes surge back from the brink of extinction

Even better, these peers of sabre-toothed tigers can help with carbon capture


An illustration of a man in a suit (Prabowo Subianto) with four speech bubbles of barying sizes that read: "SIR!".

Indonesia’s Prabowo is desperate to impress Trump and Xi

The new president’s first foreign tour was a shambles


Is India’s education system the root of its problems?

A recent comparison with China suggests that may be so

Meet the outspoken maverick who could lead India

Nitin Gadkari, India’s highways minister, talks to The Economist

The Adani scandal takes the shine off Modi’s electoral success

The tycoon’s indictment clouds the prime minister’s prospects