Home
/
Isiam
/
Muslim Minorities
/
Rohingya victims try to recover at Bangladesh hospitals
Rohingya victims try to recover at Bangladesh hospitals
Dec 14, 2025 7:36 PM

  Rohingya refugees who were shot, beaten, stabbed, burned or raped by the Myanmar military are struggling to heal in hospitals in neighboring Bangladesh, exorcising their trauma while their bodies try to recover.

  Many of them lie on thin, dirty mattresses on the floor at overflowing hospitals, and their treatment is going very slowly due to substandard conditions.

  "Every day, new Rohingya patients are coming to our hospital, most of them pregnant women and children," an emergency physician at Sadar Hospital, Dr. Shab Uttin, told Anadolu Agency. "Many of them are suffering from bullet or knife wounds as well as pneumonia, diarrhea, and infection."

  The refugees are fleeing a Myanmar security operation in which security forces and Buddhist mobs have killed men, women and children, looted homes, and torched Rohingya Muslim villages.

  More than 480,000 Rohingya have crossed from the northern part of Rakhine state into Bangladesh since the outbreak of fresh violence on Aug. 25, according to the UN migration agency.

  According to Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Abul Hasan Mahmood Ali, around 3,000 Rohingya have been killed in the crackdown.

  'I begged for their lives’

  Uttin said the hospital had performed a grueling 25 operations within the last 24 hours, warning that the situation is getting worse due to a lack of critical medical supplies.

  "But we’re doing our best to give them proper treatment all the time," he added.

  A 30-year-old Rohingya mother from Maungdaw, Dildar Begom, arrived at the hospital on Sept. 19 with a serious head injury because she was hit with a rifle butt.

  Three of Dildar's children and her husband were brutally killed by Myanmar soldiers before her eyes soon after they stormed into the house.

  "I begged for my children's lives but they didn’t care," Dildar told Anadolu Agency, crying.

  Both Dildar and her only surviving daughter have injured ears because the soldiers pulled their gold earrings out while still attached.

  "I don’t know where to go when we leave the hospital," she continued. "I don’t know whether my relatives are alive or where they are."

  Such scenes of suffering have become common at Sadar Hospital according to Jamilee, who works there as a full-time nurse.

  "The army threw a hand grenade into my house, then shot me in the leg at very close range while I was trying to get out," said Iman Hussain, another Rohingya patient at the hospital.

  Hussain said he and his sister arrived at Bangladesh’s border after walking through the hills and jungle for nine days.

  Strategy of suffering

  Strikingly, almost all the children in the hospital have broken legs.

  When asked the reason, families said Myanmar’s military would force the children to stretch out their legs and then stomp on them, so they would suffer more while fleeing the violence and not return.

  A 7-year-old Rohingya boy from the village of Hasurata, Ensar Ulla, arrived at the hospital with a broken leg. His father Khabib said he had to carry his son on his back for six days to reach the hospital.

  The Myanmar soldiers “do this intentionally, they want us to suffer," said the boy’s father. "It was the hardest thing to watch while they were stomping on my son's leg."

  Another patient at the hospital, 15-year-old Rukhiya Katu was raped and shot clear through her chest and out her back.

  Rukhiya's 67-year-old grandmother, Ayamar Katu, sitting next to her at the hospital, said they were at the same house when the military raided it.

  The soldiers immediately shot two of her sons and then raped the daughter, daughter-in-law, and Rukhiya one by one before shooting them, she related.

  "Rukhiya wasn’t even married, and she got raped by six military men," the grandmother told Anadolu Agency. "I just wanted to die while witnessing what happened.”

  "There was blood everywhere," she added.

  As to why the soldiers commit rape, Ayamar said: "This is the most effective way to humiliate us and tell us to never come back again."

  A history of repression

  Turkey has been at the forefront of providing aid to Rohingya refugees, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan highlighted the issue at this year's UN General Assembly.

  The Rohingya, described by the UN as the world's most persecuted people, have faced heightened fears of attack since dozens were killed in communal violence in 2012.

  Last October, following attacks on border posts in Rakhine's Maungdaw district, security forces launched a five-month crackdown in which, according to Rohingya groups, around 400 people were killed.

  The UN documented mass gang rapes, killings -- including of infants and young children -- brutal beatings, and disappearances committed by security personnel. In a report, UN investigators said such violations may have constituted crimes against humanity.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A Rohingya refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, September 19, 2017. REUTERS

  AA

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Muslim Minorities
Israel’s second-class citizens
  Israeli authorities have basically ignored a court order in June 2011 to provide Bedouin communities with water, just as Jewish Israelis are.   Between 80,000 and 90,000 Bedouin citizens of Israel live in unrecognized villages in the southern Negev, according to a report by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel....
Kosovo's uncertain future
  Kosovo may have declared independence in 2008, but for the past two and half years it has been unable to enjoy many of the trappings of full statehood.   Thursday's ruling from the International Court of Justice allowed ethnic Albanian Kosovars to breathe a sigh of relief.   They knew that if...
Deadly drones come to the Muslims of the Philippines
  Early last month, Tausug villagers on the Southern Philippine island of Jolo heard a buzzing sound not heard before. It is a sound familiar to the people of Waziristan who live along Pakistan's border with Afghanistan, where the United States fights the Taliban. It was the dreaded drone, which arrives...
France to vote on veil ban
  France's lower house of parliament is due to vote on whether to ban the public wearing of the face-covering veil worn by some Muslim women.   The controversial bill is likely to be passed by deputies on Tuesday and the Senate will probably follow suit in September.   Only three members of...
Crimean Tatars fear for future
  Ukraine's Muslim minority say anti-Tatar propaganda increasing under pro-Russian government.   "I've already been here for 960 days, and today is the 961st," said the weather-beaten Tatar man, squinting beneath the powerful Crimean sun.   Seydamet Smailov has spent almost three years living alone in a dilapidated cabin by the side of...
Racism on the rise in Europe
  In the wake of the atrocities in Norway perpetrated by Anders Behring Breivik, it is still unclear whether he was part of a wider conspiracy, but alarm bells are now ringing across Europe about the threat from far-right extremist groups. With no end in sight to the economic crisis afflicting...
'Europeanization' of the Balkans?
  Leon Trotsky, the most prominent figure of the Russian Revolution of 1917 after Lenin, was sent to cover the Balkan War as a war correspondent by the Russian newspaper Kievskaya Misl. In the Fall of 1912, Trotsky entered the areas populated by Muslims after the retreat of the Ottoman armies...
Ogaden Somalis file Ethiopia ICC complaint
  The Ogaden Somali Community in South Africa has filed a complaint with the International Criminal Court (ICC), urging an investigation into the actions of the Ethiopian government against the Ogaden people.   In a statement released on Tuesday on behalf of the community, a South African media advocacy group, Muslim Review...
Mindanao Peace Process in a State of Limbo
  When newly-elected Philippine President Benigno ‘Noynoy’ Aquino III addressed the Filipinos in his inaugural speech in June 2010, he announced that his regime was committed to resolve the conflict in Mindanao.   Indeed, in his subsequent maiden speech before the joint session of the two Houses of the new Philippine Congress...
French face veil ban comes into force
  A controversial ban on face veils has come into force in France, meaning anyone wearing the Muslim Niqab or Burqa in public will face a fine of up to $216 and a citizenship course.   A number of Muslims are urging women to defy the ban, including a property dealer who...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved