The story of the young Muslim man from Myanmar who had seen the horror with his eyes

Rahimol, 22, comes from the village of Foira, of the state of Myanmar Rakhins, who released it a few weeks ago. My name is Rahimol Mustafa and I'm 22. Before I got here, I was a student at local middle school. I was happy with my performance in religious studies, and I taught my children [...]
My name is Rahimol Mustafa and I'm 22. Before I got here, I was a student at local middle school. I was happy with my performance in religious studies, and I taught young children, since most of those with whom I lived were uneducated, said “Al Jazeera”, broadcast Periscope.
My goal was to be a teacher, and I was very happy in my village of Fairra until the army arrived.
It was 3:00 in the morning when the army started shooting at our village and burning our homes. We can't leave the house, because if they saw you they'd shoot, and so we hid inside.
Eventually, they arrived at our house and started shooting through the window, a bullet hit my knee. A lot of people from our village died that night. I personally saw three neighbors killed.
My father and brother took me to a hospital for medical treatment, but the hospital would not accept me because of the fighting, so my relatives took me to Bangladesh. They took me to the mountains to avoid the army.
It was a very long and painful journey, and my wound was severely infected. I felt sad.
I am grateful to the state of Bangladesh for providing us with the security and medical assistance of the MSF (Doctors Without Borders, often known by French initials), but we have no housing or future. We will have a future only if there is peace in our home.
Mianmar's Roingaya State
Almost 300,000 Ringya, mostly women and children, has fled to Bangladesh in recent weeks as a result of indiscriminately violence against the civilian population committed by the Myanmar Army.
The UN organisation and other human rights organisations have warned that mass ecstasy following killings, rapes and burned villages are signs of “ethnic cleansing”, urging the international community to pressure Aung San Suu Kyi and her government to end violence./Periscopi/

Rahimol Mustafa.











