Four Rohingya killed, two injured in Bangladesh refugee camp shootout
Incident highlights growing lawlessness in the overcrowded relief camps in Bangladesh, which shelters nearly a million Muslim Rohingya from Myanmar.
Four Rohingya refugees were killed during a gunfight between two insurgent groups in Bangladesh, police said, in the latest sign of deteriorating security in the country's overcrowded relief camps.
Local police chief Shamim Hossain said on Wednesday that an hourlong shootout took place between the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) and Rohingya Solidarity Organisation (RSO) on Tuesday night.
"Four Rohingya refugees were killed, and two Rohingya were seriously injured," he added.
Neither group gave immediate comment on the clash.
The RSO has been challenging the larger and more established ARSA for control of the camps since the start of the year, coinciding with a crackdown on ARSA by Bangladeshi security forces.
Violence has long been a fact of life for those living in the refugee settlements.
Police say more than 60 Rohingya refugees have been killed in Bangladeshi camp clashes this year, including women and children.
Struggle for survival
Bangladesh is home to around a million members of the stateless and mainly Muslim minority, most of whom fled a 2017 military crackdown in Myanmar that is now subject to a UN genocide probe.
The dozens of squalid refugee camps housing the Rohingya have emerged as a battleground between rival armed groups who have used the settlements as staging posts for drug trafficking and human smuggling.
The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said Sunday it was "alarmed by the continuing deterioration of security conditions in the camps".
Malnutrition is also widespread, with the UN food agency saying a funding shortfall this year had forced it to cut rations by a third.
Those Rohingya remaining in Myanmar face severe persecution by authorities who deny them citizenship and access to healthcare.
The desperate situation both there and in the Bangladeshi camps has prompted thousands of Rohingya to embark upon dangerous and often deadly sea trips to Southeast Asian countries to escape.
More than 1,000 landed in Indonesia's westernmost province last month, the biggest wave of Rohingya since 2015.
Nearly 350 Rohingya died or went missing last year while attempting hazardous sea crossings, the UNHCR has estimated.