Border News Agency
Bangladesh, May 23
Protesters among the refugee community in Bangladesh are calling on the international community to take action against the leaders of the Arakan Army (AA), including its Commander-in-Chief, General Twan Mrat Naing.
Some refugees in camps in Bangladesh have been holding up photos of Arakan Army leaders while staging protests and calling for action to be taken against them.
Refugees have accused the leaders of the Arakan Army (AA), including its Commander-in-Chief General Twan Mrat Naing, of committing genocide, war crimes, and human rights violations against the Muslim community.
In the Arakan decisive war, the Arakan Army (AA) has taken full control of nearly the entire Arakan State, including the Arakan-Bangladesh border, and is now establishing administrative mechanisms under the banner of the Arakan People’s Revolutionary Government.
During the battles for Buthidaung and Maungdaw, towns with a large Muslim population, so-called Rohingya armed extremists collaborated with the junta forces and launched resistance attacks against the Arakan Army.
In addition, armed Muslim trainees and so-called Rohingya extremists committed acts of violence, including the abduction and killing of civilian residents.
According to local Arakanese residents, these extremist armed groups have also been carrying out cross-border terrorist activities along the Arakan-Bangladesh border, including drug trafficking, abducting and killing civilians, and launching cross-border attacks.