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Schools reopen in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, but Rohingya Muslims are still fleeing

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A newly arrived Rohingya girl carries food rations in Kutupalong, Bangladesh. Photo: AP

Myanmar has reopened schools for ethnic Rakhine children in townships hit hard by recent communal violence declaring “stability” has returned, state-backed media said on Sunday, but thousands of Rohingya Muslims remain on the move from the same areas.

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Rakhine state has been torn apart after unrest erupted in late August, when raids by Rohingya militants sparked a massive army crackdown which the UN says amounts to “ethnic cleansing”.

Half of Rakhine’s roughly 1 million Rohinyga Muslim population has fled to Bangladesh since then, creating the world’s largest refugee crisis, claiming their villages were incinerated by the army and Rakhine mobs.

A newly arrived Rohingya Muslim family. Photo: AP
A newly arrived Rohingya Muslim family. Photo: AP

Violence has also displaced nearly 30,000 ethnic Rakhine, who are Buddhists, and Hindus inside the state.

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Education officials said schools had reopened in Maungdaw and Buthidaung townships “as stability returns” in the epicentre of the violence, according to a report by The Global New Light of Myanmar on Sunday.

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