A
bloody road to apartheid
MYANMAR’S government has reported
that 82 people have died in the past week’s ethnic violence in the western
state of Rakhine, and 2,800 houses been razed by fire. Both figures are almost
certainly underestimates. The whole length of the state, a narrow coastal strip
whose northern end borders Bangladesh, has seen mounting tension and often
fighting between the majority Rakhine population, who are mostly Buddhist, and
the Rohingya minority, who are mostly Muslim and are seen by many Rakhines and
other Burmese as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants.
Human Rights Watch, a New York-based
monitoring and lobby group, has used satellite imagery to show the destruction
by fire on October 24th of a Muslim quarter on the island of Kyauk Pyu. The
residents are reported to have fled, in many cases by sea, to the state
capital, Sittwe. There, some 75,000 people, mostly Muslim Rohingyas, are
already confined to squalid camps for the internally displaced, where they have
been living since the previous bout of blood-letting in June.
Trouble in Kyauk Pyu will be of
particular concern to the central government—as well as to China—since it is to
be the site of a port from which oil-and-gas pipelines across Myanmar to
south-western China will be supplied.
Violence was also reported in at
least five other areas on October 26th. Curfews are in place in Mrauk-U, in the
neighbouring district of Min Bya and in Sittwe itself. Tourists are being
stopped from travelling to Mrauk-U.
In the south, in Thandwe, a town of
50,000 of whom 30-40% are said to be Rohingyas, tension is high and ethnic
Rakhines say they no longer dare be seen associating with their Muslim friends.
They see it as only a matter of time before the conflict reaches them, and for
this they blame the Rohingyas.
In surrounding villages, some
Rohingya families have already been threatened into leaving. Yet there is no
obvious sign of increased security. The government has been accused—in June and
again now—of doing too little to protect the Rohingyas. Indeed, the security
forces are accused of committing abuses of their own against them.
After the violence in June, many
Rakhines are convinced that only total separation of the two ethnic groups can
ensure harmony. That belief is now being put into practice, as Muslim districts
are torched and crudely armed militias of young Rakhines wage ethnic war.
The latest round of violence started
on the evening of October 21st in Mrauk-U, a tourist centre that was once the
capital of an independent kingdom of Arakan. A Rakhine merchant was killed
there by a mob after being caught selling a large quantity of rice to Muslims.
The next morning, in what seems to have been a related incident, three Rakhines
were killed, unleashing a terrifying wave of revenge attacks on Muslim villages
around Mrauk-U. By October 24th unrest had spread across the state.
The bloodshed in June was sparked by
the rape and murder of a Rakhine girl. But historic animosities run deep. The
Rohingyas are not recognised by the Myanmar government as a separate minority.
Most were deprived of citizenship by the application of a 1982 law on
nationality, and so are regarded as illegal immigrants. In 1992, 250,000 were
repatriated from Bangladesh, where they had fled following earlier rounds of
persecution.
The government has said that the
situation in the state is now basically under control. That, too, is
questionable. A particular worry is in Sittwe itself, a town of about 200,000,
half of them Buddhist, half Muslim. Just one Muslim district in the centre of
town, Aung Mingala, survived the ethnic cleansing in June. Its inhabitants are
not allowed out, even to shop. But the quarter is a focus for local Rakhine
activists, who want to see it cleared too.
Even democracy activists in Yangon,
Myanmar’s biggest city, refuse to acknowledge the Rohingyas as Burmese
citizens. Aung San Suu Kyi, the opposition leader, has said she does not know
if they are or not. Thein Sein, the reform-minded president, said in June that
the only solution was for the Rohingyas to relocate to another country.
Shocking as this sounded to many foreigners, to most Burmese, and virtually
every Rakhine, it was no more than a simple statement of fact. The Economist (Picture
credit: AFP)
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