Myanmar has barred Rohingya from mosques since start of Ramadan
Officials in Rakhine state have stopped Muslim minority worshipping since Ramadan began
Myanmar's security forces barred Muslim Rohingya from worshipping in mosques across Rakhine state since the start of Ramadan, said people with knowledge of the matter.
The ban started in the third week of last month at the start of the Muslim fasting month. It is ongoing even with the end this week of Eid ul-Fitr, the festival that marks the close of Ramadan.
Nearly all the 500 mosques in the western state had been affected, Rohingyas said.
The state has been wracked by clashes between the minority Rohingya and the Buddhist majority Myanmese.
"At the start of Ramadan, Nasaka forces [Myanmar's border guards] sealed six mosques in our vicinity and threatened to arrest or shoot us if we dared to pray there," Kalimullah, a 60-year-old Rohingya man, said on Tuesday by phone from Alethangyaw township in Rakhine. "We hoped they would open the mosques for us for Eid. But they did not. We now know that Eid prayers were not held in any mosque in Arakan [Rakhine] yesterday."
Instead of easing the restrictions for Eid, the clampdown intensified, Kalimullah said.