Additional Superintendent of Police Rafikul Islam said they recovered four bodies after the clash which took place around 8pm at Choumohoni Tabligh Jamaat Markaj area.
Ukhiya Police Station’s Officer-in-Charge Monjur Morshed said they are yet to identify the Rohingyas killed in the clash.
An additional armed battalion has been deployed in the camp after the incident.
Bangladesh is currently hosting more than 1.1 million Rohingyas in the coastal district. Factional clashes now occur more frequently at the camps. In the last five days, seven Rohingyas were killed in clashes over dominance.
It is unclear how the Rohingyas manage to get hold of firearms. There are allegations that some residents of the camps are involved in criminal activities.
Ukhiya Police Station sources said four cases were filed there until Tuesday. Police arrested one of the accused – 20-year-old Ziaur Rahman, son of Mohammad Ibrahim, a resident of Kutupalong camp’s block D.
Rapid Action Battalion has arrested nine Rohingya criminals with firearms, bullets and sharp weapons.
Also read: 2 years of Rohingya influx: 43 murders in camps, 32 killed in gunfights
‘Security threat to region’
Hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas fled their homeland in Myanmar’s Rakhine state in 2017 after the Tatmadaw launched a brutal offensive targeting the mainly-Muslim ethnic minority.
The overwhelming number of refuge seekers were kept in makeshift camps in Cox’s Bazar which borders Myanmar.
Bangladesh has been urging Myanmar to take back its nationals and the two sides even signed an agreement but there has been no progress.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has said that the Rohingyas are not only a threat to the security of Bangladesh but also the region.
Also read: Rohingyas a threat to national, regional security: PM
Bangladesh has been urging the global community to take effective steps to resolve the crisis.
Last month, Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen told the 27th ASEAN Regional Forum said there is a high possibility that uncertainty could be created in the region if there’s no solution to the problem. This could frustrate hope for a peaceful, secure and stable region.
"Our fear is that, if this problem is not solved quickly, it may lead to pockets of radicalism," he said reminding all that terrorists have no borders and no faith.
Also read: Dhaka fears uncertainty in region if Rohingya crisis not resolved, seeks ASEAN role