The 
incident happened at the village of ‘Wa Chein’ (in northern Maungdaw) at
 around 11 am on Sunday and the victim is identified as Zahid Hussein 
s/o Aamir Hussein.
“The 
victim was fortunate enough to escape death as the bullet hit at the 
left side of his head but lost his consciousness and fell down 
immediately. He is now in critical condition being treated in the clinic
 in ‘Taman Thar’ village, according to the reliable sources in the 
region.
“The BGP 
ordered the villagers of ‘Wa Chein’ to destroy 30 homes on the pretext 
that they were not included in the ‘Household Map.’ The villagers didn’t
 demolish their homes. So, the BGP raided the village on December 25.
“They 
arrived at Zahid Hussein’s home and ordered him to Demolish his own 
home. He replied that he couldn’t do so without looking at the situation
 and would do so only when others do. So, the BGP forced started and 
torturing him and another BGP man shot him at his head from 5 yards 
away.
He fell down and became critical. He is now being treated at Taman Thar Clinic”, said a local on the condition of anonymity.
After the 
incident happened, the BGP forced other six families in the village to 
demolish their home using threats and terror and then ordered to 
demolish the remaining.
Some homes demolished at the village of ‘Wa Chein’ belong to the following people.
1) Ali Hussein s/o Noor Hussein
2) Abu Ahmed s/o Noor Mohammed
3) Zahid Hussein s/o Aamir Hussein
4) Abu Alam s/o Sultan Ahmed
5) Mohammed Shafi s/o Abdu Jalil
The 
numbers of the people becoming displaced are alarmingly increasing and 
many people are trying to flee to Bangladesh as the BGP forces continues
 to demolish more and more Rohingya homes across Maungdaw a2nd 
Buthidaung Townships reportedly acting on the Order by the Rakhine State
 Administration (controlled by NLD).
–
A list of homes and shops destroyed recently at some other villages is as follows.
On December 22, 3 houses were demolished at ‘Zuthar Hali.’ The house owners are:
1) Mohammed Hussein (31), s/o Abul Hussein
2) Fedaan Ali (25), s/o Ghaffar
3) Noor Mustafa (42), s/o Nurul Hoque
On December 22, 2 shops were demolished at ‘Faari.’ The owners are:
1) Inayatullah (41), s/o Halimullah 
2) Dolu (40), s/o Abu Nu’man
On December 24, 5 houses were demolished at ‘Maudi’ village. The owners are
1) Zahid Alam s/o Sayed Alam
2) Noor Alam (20), s/o Mohammed Ali
3) Mohammed Sharif (20), s/o Shamim Jalal
4) For Alam (24), s/o Mv Hakim Ali
5) Ayub (25), s/o Sayed Noor
On December 24, six houses were destroyed at ‘Fulaya’ hamlet of ‘Kwan Thi Pin’ village. They belong to:
1) Zafar (30), s/o of Rashid Ahmed 
2) Mohammed Rashid (25), s/o Sirajullah
3) Dil Mohammed (50), s/o Rashiduddin
4) Faisal (24), s/o Islam
5) Osman (23), s/o Nooru
6) Mohammed Ayub (25), s/o Noor Mohammed
On 
December 24, two mosques, two shops and 8 homes were demolished by the 
BGP at the village of Kyar Gaung Taung locally known as Rabailla.
–
Mostly, 
the BGP have forced the Rohingya villagers to dismantle their own houses
 and shops at gun-points or by means of using threats of imprisonment. 
In the occasions when the locals resisted, the BGP themselves have 
demolished many homes. It has also been reported that the BGP indulge in
 plundering Rohingya properties and livestocks during their raids on 
Rohingya villages to destroy homes.
More than 
50,000 Rohingya people have already been displaced by the brutal 
military offensives in northern Maungdaw, a region which has been sealed
 off from international media and humanitarians, since October 9, 2016. 
Adding to that, the government actions to demolish more homes are 
leaving many people without any shelter in this winter and going by the 
emerging reports, many more people in Maungdaw are trying to flee to 
neighboring Bangladesh for the safety of their lives.
“On one 
hand, they unlawfully killed, torured and arrested hundreds of innocent 
people and raped many women. On another hand, they burnt down thousands 
of homes. And then, they removed fences surrounding our homes. And now, 
they are destroying our homes. More people are trying to flee to 
Bangladesh. Where are the laws and humanity?” exclaimed an elderly in 
northern Maungdaw, while speaking to Rohingya Vision TV.
The houses
 and shops being destroyed in the rural villages are not modern 
buildings that require officials’ permission(s) but traditional 
country-type structures built of bamboos and woods and covered with 
‘Nipa Palm Leaves.’ These widespread destructions of homes are now seen 
among the locals as yet another attempt of cleansing their (i.e. 
Rohingya) population through systematic displacement of the people.
The order to demolish homes had only been imposed on the Rohingya community, not on the Rakhine Buddhist community.