More than 80,000 not receiving aid in north Rakhine: WFP

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YANGON: Food aid for more than 80,000 people in parts of northwest Myanmar has been suspended because of a military clampdown in the area, the World Food Programme said Wednesday.

Troops have poured into the north of Rakhine state near the Bangladesh border since attacks on police posts over a week ago, closing off an area where most people are from Myanmar’s persecuted Muslim Rohingya minority.

Security forces have killed at least 30 people since the raids, according to state media, while a tally of latest official figures show at least 40  people are being held.

Eleven were arrested in the past two days and are now being interrogated, according to a government statement late Wednesday.

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The WFP normally feeds some 80,000-85,000 people in the locked-down area, but aid deliveries have been disrupted and the military has prevented any  supplies getting through.

“There is military everywhere and a curfew in place, and so it’s impossible to access any of the areas affected,” said Arsen Sahakyan, WFP’s partnership officer in Myanmar.

“The areas affected are also the areas where we normally operate.”

Activists say a violent crackdown has been unfolding, with troops gunning  down Muslim civilians and torching their villages. But the military says it has itself been fending off violent attacks.

The government has blamed the border guard attacks on Islamists from a  little-known group called “Aqa Mul Mujahidin” and said hundreds of militants are planing more attacks.

Details of the killings and the ensuing lockdown by the military have proved difficult to confirm in the remote and tightly controlled area.

The violence has raised the spectre of a repeat of sectarian unrest in 2012  that ripped the impoverished state apart, leaving more than 100 dead and  driving tens of thousands of Rohingya into squalid displacement camps.