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04 January 2017 - 22:08
News ID: 426268
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'The Rohingya Alan Kurdi':
Rasa - A heartbreaking picture purporting to show a dead Rohingya child from Myanmar has evoked memories of Syrian refugee Aylan Kurdi who was found washed up on a Turkish coast after drowning in the Mediterranean sea in 2015.
 A dead Rohingya child from Myanmar

RNA - Face down in the mud, a baby boy lies still after washing up on a river bank.

 

His name is Mohammed Shohayet, a 16-month-old Rohingya refugee whose family fled their home for Bangladesh to escape the violence in Myanmar's Rakhine State, only to drown during the journey along with his mother, uncle and three-year-old brother.

 

"When I see the picture, I feel like I would rather die," Mohammed's father, Zafor Alam, told CNN. "There is no point in me living in this world."

 

The image has parallels with that of the young Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi, who was found dead on a Turkish beach in September 2015, after trying to flee the civil war at home.

 

The conflicts the two boys left behind are different, but the desperation of their families to escape is all too familiar.

 

Myanmar's Muslim Rohingyas are considered one of the world's most persecuted minorities. The Myanmar government views them as Bengali immigrants, despite the fact that they've lived for generations in Myanmar's Rakhine State.

 

"In our village, helicopters fired guns at us, and the Myanmar soldiers also opened fire on us," said Alam. "We couldn't stay in our house. We fled and went into hiding in the jungle."

 

"My grandfather and grandmother were burnt to death," he added. "Our whole village was burnt by the military. Nothing left."

 

Zafor Alam said they ran from village to village trying to escape the violence.

 

"I walked for six days. I couldn't eat rice for four days. I could not sleep at all for six days," he said. "We constantly changed our location as the military was searching for Rohingyas."

 

Alam became separated from his family during the journey and made it to the Naf River which runs between Myanmar and Bangladesh. He says he began swimming and was picked up by Bangladeshi fishermen who took him across the border.

 

Then, he says he started the process to get his family across to safety.

 

"I contacted a boatman and asked him to help my wife and sons so that they could cross the river. They were waiting on the other side," Alam said.

 

"I called (my family) on December 4. They were very desperate to leave Myanmar," Alam said. "They were the last words I had with my family. When I was talking to my wife over phone, I could hear my youngest son calling 'Abba-Abba' (father-father)."

 

Just a few hours after that phone call, Alam said his family tried to make their escape.

 

"When the Myanmar police got a sense that people were preparing to cross the river, they opened fire," Alam said. "Hurriedly, the boatman took all people on board to escape the firing. The boat became overloaded. Then it sank."

 

A day later, on December 5, he learned what happened.

 

"Someone phoned me and said my son's dead body was found," Alam said. "He took a photo of my son by mobile phone and sent it to me. I was speechless."

 

"It's very difficult for me to talk about my son. He was very fond of his father," he added. "My son was very affectionate. In our village, everyone used to love him."

 

Alam's story of his family being torn apart trying to escape is one familiar to many Rohingya families who have made it across the border to Bangladesh. The International Organization for Migration says some 34,000 people have crossed the border in recent weeks and months.

 

"Only the river knows how many dead bodies of Rohingyas are floating there," Alam said.

 

Now at the Leda refugee camp in Teknaf, southern Bangladesh, Alam is struggling to come to terms with what happened. "I have no one left. My two sons and my wife died. All are finished," he said.

 

"We are also suffering here in Bangladesh. There is no house here to live in. There is no food. People who have been living in the camp for a long time, they have given us shelter."

 

But at least, it's a respite from the violence.

 

"We used to live in constant fear of losing our lives in Myanmar," he said. "We don't have any fear in Bangladesh."

 

CNN is unable to independently verify Zafor Alam's account, as access to northern Rakhine State is still heavily restricted.

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