Young Mianmar calls Al Jazeerah and shows the horror that is happening to Muslims ( Photo/Video)

The strangled smell of burnt wood followed 19-year-old Ahmed for days. On Saturday, a group of armed men set fire to his village of Ywa Thai Kay. Fired to destroy the legs and noise of bullets by cutting the air, Ahmed, who spoke under a nickname, was forced [...]
Fired to destroy the legs and noise of bullets by cutting the air, Ahmed, who spoke under a nickname, was forced to leave his childhood home, angry at his most precious books in English.
Five days later, Ahmed is again facing the threat of arson, this time in the remote village of Myma Kayin Dan, where he and 2,000 other unarmed Rohingaya civilians have sought refuge after losing their homes.
The surrounding villages were detected on Wednesday, the “Al Jazeera” broadcasts Periscope.
“After this village (it's about the village of Myoma Kayin Dan) it's a large river”, Ahmed said in a telephone interview.
“Grath and children will not be able to cross the river. We're so worried, because we're stuck between the river and the army without food to eat”, he's coming.
He went on: “If they even start burning this village, then we'll all be in trouble, there's nowhere to go”
According to satellite images collected by “Human Rights Observatory” (HRW), at least 10 areas in about 100 kilometers in the north state of Rakhine, located west of the country on the Bangladesh border, have been destroyed over the last five days.
“There is no ARSA here,” said Ahmed, referring to Roggya's Arkaan Rescue Army, the ethnic armed group, which launched a series of attacks against dozens of government checkpoints last Friday, where more than 70 were killed, including 12 security officers.
We informed the army that there are no warriors here, so they could control without fear, but instead they shot us with their guns and burned our houses... there is nowhere to go. Everyone's worried, and a lot of people are trying to commit suicide”, he expressed fear.
In the past week, about 50,000 Ringya Muslims have been on the run from violence.
About 27,000 of those who have fled have crossed the border to reach Bangladesh, while 20,000 are busy in a country between Bangladesh and Roggyas, according to sources of the United Nations Organization.
This is the worst outbreak of violence in the state of troubled Mianmar in the past five years, and the death toll is expected to rise.
“We already have satellite data showing that there have been many burns”, said Phil Robertson, deputy director of Asia Observation for Human Rights (HRW). “This will continue to spread”, he added.
But with the government dare to promote the country's strong nationalist forces, these calls are likely to fall on deaf ears./Periscopi/













