Police intercepted a group of 70 Rohingya late Saturday after they crossed the "zero line" border zone, where Myanmar soldiers earlier fired mortars and machine guns at villagers making the dangerous dash from the northern state of Rakhine into Bangladesh.
The villagers were caught roughly four kilometres inside Bangladeshi territory en route to a refugee camp in Kutupalong, where thousands of Rohingya already live in squalid conditions, said local police chief Abul Khaer.
Police said some of those detained had entered Bangladesh via the Ghumdhum border area -- where the Myanmar forces unleashed the barrage of fire just hours earlier.
"They were pleading with us not to send them back to Myanmar," said one policeman on condition of anonymity.
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Another 20 Rohingya were caught Sunday and sent back after crossing the Naf river, a natural border between Myanmar and Bangladesh, according to Ariful Islam, a commander with Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB).
Another border officer, Manzurul Hassan Khan, said Sunday that fresh gunfire could be heard in villages across the border in Rakhine, a hotbed of religious hatred focused on the stateless Rohingya Muslim minority.
Thousands of Rohingya have fled towards Bangladesh, but authorities there have refused to let most of them in, with an untold number of people -- mainly women and children -- stranded along the border zone.
The impoverished country already hosts some 400,000 Rohingya refugees.
Officials in Cox's Bazar, the district bordering Myanmar that is home to several large refugee camps, have been instructed not to allow any "illegal entry" by Rohingya, Abdur Rahman, a senior government official, told AFP.
At least 100 mainly women and children arrived Sunday at a makeshift camp in Balukhali, according to an AFP correspondent at the scene, many bringing tales of horror from over the border.
"They fired so close that I cannot hear anything now," 70-year-old Mohammad Zafar said of armed Buddhists who shot dead his two sons in a field.
"They came with rods and sticks to drive us to the border yelling, 'Bengali bastards'", Zafar told AFP.
"We grew up with them. I can't figure out how they could be so merciless," she told AFP.
Others reported being sent across the border by their husbands and brothers, who stayed back to fight the army and Buddhist militias.
Despite years of persecution, the Rohingya largely eschewed violence.
But in October ARSA attacked a string of Myanmar border posts, sparking a military crackdown that left scores dead and forced 87,000 people to flee to Bangladesh.
In Rakhine itself six members of a Hindu family have become the latest victims of the violence. Their bullet- riddled bodies -- including three children and a woman -- were discovered on Sunday and brought to a hospital in Maungdaw, the main town in northern Rakhine.
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