A Rohingya woman named Banu, while holding a folded letter inside the bamboo shelter center in Cox's Bazar, stood. In this, her husband wrote to him - If you find a good pot, then arranges for the marriage of girl Uncle. And just do not worry, I do not have any problem in prison.
The letter was sent to him from a prison in Rakhine state, hundreds of miles away. Her husband was detained in the demonstration of the Myanmar army's raids in late August last year. Since then, she received any news from her first husband.
The Rakhine army has taken shelter in neighboring Bangladesh with seven million Rohingya crossing the border to survive the operation. Among them is Banu and her 9 children.
Several human rights groups say that the Myanmar army has killed, raped and detained several thousand Rohingyas in the violence that lasted for weeks. They have mixed the soil after the village and mixed it with soil. Although the Myanmar government has denied this accusation.
The Red Cross has said that the Rohingyas are not ready to cross the border while they are anxious to know whether the family members have taken shelter in Bangladesh safely. They are eagerly awaiting the status of loved ones.
International Charity Organization Red Cross has delivered the letter to Rohingya refugees from Myanmar jail. Within the last 20 years, this elaborate paper has emerged among the largest and fast-growing refugee families in the isolated families.
The Red Cross said that since August, they have collected more than 1,600 such documents from Bangladesh. In the meantime, 160 people reached the Rakhine jail and received his reply in Bangladesh. The biggest proof of the survival of the loved ones is these letters.
The Reuters Red Cross officials were able to see seven such papers. These hand-written letters were in the envelope of the printed red cross. But Reuters did not independently verify the letters.