AA’s “Rakhita Roadmap” Exposed: A Demographic Engineering Plan to Erase Rohingya From Arakan

New developments from northern Arakan confirm that the terrorist and narcotics-funded Arakan Army (AA) has moved from covert execution of remaining Rohingya to open execution of a long-standing project: the removal of the remaining Rohingya population from Maungdaw and Buthidaung and the appropriation of their land for newly engineered Rakhine-only settlements. Multiple credible accounts now show that abandoned Rohingya villages, emptied only because their residents fled genocidal violence, are being demolished, rebuilt, and converted into exclusive Rakhine zones. Farmland, ponds, homesteads, and community spaces that have belonged to Rohingya families for generations are being confiscated, divided, and distributed to incoming settlers as part of the AA’s “Rakhita Roadmap,” a political and demographic engineering blueprint aimed at reshaping the ethnic character of Arakan (Rakhine) State.

For the Rohingya, It is the continuation of ethnic cleansing through administrative and territorial engineering. The AA is attempting to complete, by bulldozer, paperwork, and settlement expansion, what previous waves of violence attempted through massacres and forced displacement. The group’s underlying objective is clear: eliminate the Rohingya presence from strategic northern corridors and entrench a new demographic arrangement that secures long-term dominance for the AA’s political ambitions.

The Rohingya people reject this project absolutely. We want to say, our land is not abandoned, not forfeited, and not available to be claimed by any other people, terror groups. Every confiscated field, every demolished village, and every newly built settlement only strengthens the collective resolve of Rohingya communities to defend their ancestral homeland and to challenge any force that attempts to erase their identity or history. The Rohingya have endured decades of systematic persecution, mass displacement, and targeted Genocide, yet their connection to their land has never weakened. The AA’s attempt to assert permanence through settlement construction will not succeed; it will instead expose the group’s criminal intent and further de legitimize its political standing.

The message emerging from Rohingya communities is clear and unwavering: if the Arakan Army continues its project to remove the Rohingya from their homeland, it will not destroy the Rohingya; it will destroy its own fate. No terror group can secure legitimacy by dispossessing an indigenous population. No demographic project built on theft, intimidation, and narcotics revenue can define the long-term reality of a region. The Rohingya remain an unbroken nation, unwilling to surrender their birthright or allow a militia to decide the future of Arakan.

Arakan is the ancestral homeland of the Rohingya. It cannot be rewritten by force. It cannot be erased by settlement maps. And it cannot be claimed by those who rely on violence and drug money to assert control. The Rohingya people are still here, resilient, determined, and unwilling to accept any project that seeks to eliminate their existence or confiscate their land.