Settlers attack Jumma village in Sajek after CHT Commission's
visit
chtnews.com
News No. 138/2008, August 14, 2008
Hot on the heels of the CHT Commission's visit to the area, the illegal settlers
backed by a strong contingent of army personnel carried out an attack on the
village of Gangaram Mukh in
Sajek under Rangamati
district on 9 August.
There are serious allegations that army and settlers have been resorting to
vengeful actions against those Jummas who gave
interview to the delegation of the Chittagong Hill Tracts Commission who
visited the three districts of Khagrachari, Rangamati and Bandarban from 7 -
10 August. The Commission visited Sajek on 8 August.
Speaking to the chtnews.com yesterday in South Khabangpujjya, Mukul Kumar Chakma
s/o late Sukesh Shobhan
Chakma of village Gangaram Mukh
in Sajek alleged that on the night of 9 august a
group of Bengali settlers backed by a group of army personnel from Baghaihat zone attacked their village and ransacked his
house for giving an interview to the CHT Commission
the day before.
Narrating the incident he said "Since the evening of 9 August Bengali
people had been whispering among themselves (planning an attack). At 10 pm they
started shouting in a chorus. Then at 11 pm we heard them calling out to each
other. A few moments later I saw them coming across to our house with their
torches on. I woke my wife Arati Chakma up from bed.
My daughter woke up herself. I told them to take some necessary things.
Thereafter, I tried to wake my son Kuchi Chakma (13).
He was reluctant to get up, but I kicked him out of the bed. As we were putting
our belongings in bags, the settlers gave a big shout and attacked our house.
We jumped into the
A farmer and a pastor, Mr. Chakma said they came back home the next morning
after the settlers had gone. He continued: "The settlers ransacked the
house of Buddho Dhan and
the shop of Tungkala Chakma. They also ransacked the
house of Hridoy Ranjan (65)
and took him away. Later we came to know that he was beaten seriously. As a
result he sustained injury in his head and in his right thigh, and his left arm
paralysed. During the attack settlers caught some Jumma
villagers who were not able to run away. After returning to the village, we
came to know that the army also took part in the ransacking of our houses. They
particularly searched for Pramika Chakma (a teacher
of UNICEF-run Para Kendra or village centre) and asked the villagers 'Where is Pramika?' They were looking for her because she had given
an interview to the CHT Commission."
He said the villagers had collected Taka 400 and given it to him to come to Khagrachari to report the incident to the CHT Commission. "I came to Dighinala
on foot, traversing jungle paths. That took me 6 hours from 10 am to 4 pm. From
Dighinala I phoned Ms Sarah Hossain
and told her what happened after the CHT Commission
had left. She advised me to contact two Jumma
Advocates -- Gayana Chakma and Ashutosh
Chakma. I contacted them accordingly and came to Khagrachari."
Mr. Chakma said he went back to the village on 12 August. "I went up to
He went on to say: "Now I am on the run. I never spent a single night out.
If I have to keep on like this, I will join the party (UPDF).
I will work for the people and for my land. (Ikko mui dhei
dhei aagong. Mui kanadin ghara
barey reit
nah kadang. Idikkenguri thei paley
mui Partyit sumim. Desh jadattei kam gurim.)
He said his family was running out of food. So were the other villagers. One
kind-hearted person distributed 2 bags of rice to each of the affected
families. "We got 8kgs. I grew one thousand
orange saplings, but I could not sell them due to the tense situation." he
lamented.
Mr. Chakma said when the CHT Commission visited their
village on 8 August the villagers gave it a warm reception. "We showed
them the affected areas and five of us agreed to give interviews."
The others who gave interview to the Commission included 1. Ms Pramita Chakma, 26, teacher of Unicef
Para Kendra (Unicef-run village centre), 2. wife of Shuddhodhan Chakma, 3. Jiban Shanti Chakma of village Simana
Para and 4. wife of Bilash
Karbari or Gadabi's mother.
Of them, Shuddhodhan's wife (he could not remember
her name) was beaten by the CO of Baghaihat zone, and
as a result her right hand got fractured. Others have gone into hiding, fearing
arrest and harassment, he said.
Bandarban
Choton Kanti Tonchongya from Bandarban said he
had to go into hiding after his meeting with the CHT
Commission on 10 August. "The army is searching for me" he told the chtnews.com. "An army officer asked Jolmoni Tonchongya about me and
my whereabouts."
He said the day before the CHT Commission's visit to Bandarban, some people under the banner of Sacheton Chattra Samaj (Conscious Students Community) put up posters at
different places in the town. The posters were about land grabbing and human
rights violations in the CHT. "But the army
blames me and UPDF for this. The Purbokone
(a daily published form
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