20/04/2025
𝐁𝐑𝐄𝐀𝐊𝐈𝐍𝐆; To the Honorable People and Government of Bangladesh,
We, the Rohingya people, speak today with deep pain. For decades, we have endured unspeakable suffering—massacres, r**e, forced displacement, and the destruction of our homes and mosques—at the hands of the Burmese genocidal military and the terrorist Buddhist group, the Arakan Army (AA). Our cries have echoed since 1942, but today, we feel a new pain—a betrayal from those we once considered our brothers.
On April 16 and 17, the Arakan Army openly celebrated the Water Festival inside Bangladeshi territory. They marched in uniform, their flags and symbols on display, under the protection of Bangladeshi security forces. They showed no shame. They were celebrated, while we, the victims of their violence, continue to suffer in refugee camps—stateless, voiceless, and without justice.
This is not just painful—it is a deep insult to our people and our martyrs.
The Arakan Army has murdered thousands of Rohingya Muslims, r***d our women, burned our villages, and killed our children. Yet today, they roam free in Bangladesh. Meanwhile, our defenders—those who resist genocide—are imprisoned and labeled as “terrorists.” This is not justice. This is betrayal.
You say “No to Israel,” yet you host its mirror image. The Arakan Army is to us what Israel is to Palestine. Their crimes are the same. So how can Bangladesh—a proud Muslim nation that once resisted oppression—stand with those who have slaughtered us?
ARSA, our Rohingya resistance fighters, are not perfect. But they were born from suffering. They don’t seek power—they seek protection. When the oppressed are criminalized and their oppressors celebrated, peace becomes impossible, and injustice grows.
To the people of Bangladesh: this is not just about Rohingya. The Arakan Army’s next target is your own land—Chittagong. They are not peaceful guests; they are militants. Today they dance in Bangladesh wearing their uniforms. Tomorrow, they may attack.
To the government: the world stood with Bangladesh in 1971 during its genocide. Today, the Rohingya face the same horrors. But you stand with the killers. This is not neutrality—it is complicity.
You must decide: will Bangladesh be remembered as a nation of justice or one that protected war criminals? Will you support the oppressed or those who burn them alive?
Time is running out. The truth will be known. And one day, history will ask: when the Rohingya cried for help, where did Bangladesh stand?
Source: Rohingya Media
Photos: Online
Reported by: Arakhan News Paper
Chief Adviser GOB
Bangladesh
Amar sunar bangla