Human rights groups say
the Rohingya people are one of the most persecuted ethnic groups in the
world. My own research work on endangered people has also shown that they
are the most persecuted people in our time. More than a million people in
Myanmar from the Muslim minority are currently stateless, and genocidal
violence in the country’s west has put nearly 140,000 of them in internment
camps.
Although Myanmar has gone through a
political change with an elected government running the state, it still doesn’t
want to recognize its Rohingya people whose ties to the soil of Arakan
(Rakhine) state are older than others. This is a sad matter for all the human
rights groups around the globe who expected better from a government that is
now led by Suu Kyi. With her inexcusable silences to condemn the crimes of her
Buddhist people against unarmed Rohingya and other minority Muslims living
inside Myanmar she has been a disappointing icon since the latest genocidal
pogroms started in 2012. But there was always that hope in the midst of
hopelessness that she will Human rights groupseventually self-correct and do
the right thing once put into power.
Well, all such wishful hopes are
evaporating fast. Suu Kyi does not want to recognize the existence of the
Rohingya people, but more problematically doesn’t want the U.S. to, either call
this most persecuted people as the ‘Rohingya’.
According to the New York Times, her
government recently made an official request to the US ambassador to Myanmar to
not even use the term “Rohingya.” “We won’t use the term Rohingya because
Rohingya are not recognized as among the 135 official ethnic groups,” said Kyaw
Zay Ya, a foreign ministry official quoted by the Times. “Our position is that
using the controversial term does not support the national reconciliation
process and solving problems.”
So, here is the problem. Though
they’ve lived in Myanmar for centuries, the Rohingya are viewed by many in this
Buddhist majority country, which has transformed into what I have been calling
a den of unfathomable intolerance, as illegal immigrants from nearby Bangladesh
because of their racial and religious similarities with them. The Myanmar
majority (approximately 80%) practices Buddhism and supports anti-Muslim policies. Like their
government, they refuse to use the term “Rohingya,” and instead use “Bengalis.”
Suu Kyi supporters including the
Dalai Lama had hoped she would defend the stateless
Rohingya after her party’s big victory in elections last November. But this
newest diplomatic request suggests an end to the crisis is perhaps even further
away than expected.
Since mid-2012, the Rohingyas of the
Arakan (Rakhine) state have been confined to concentration camps, where conditions are
simply atrocious, and had their citizenship revoked. Some have attempted to
flee by taking a dangerous ocean voyage in rickety boats,
often with tragic results.
Last month’s tragic boat accident off the coast of
Burma’s Arakan State killed an estimated 21 Rohingya Muslims, including nine
children, and left another 20 missing. The government-controlled newspaper,
Global New Light of Myanmar, made a rare admission that the tragedy, in which
a packed boat capsized in heavy seas, resulted from government travel
restrictions that prevent Rohingya from traveling overland, forcing them to
travel by boat even when conditions are dangerous.
The accident underscores the serious
plight of Burma’s long-persecuted Rohingya minority. The boat was making a
regular trip from an internally displaced persons’ (IDP) camp in Pauktaw to the
markets near camps around the state capital, Sittwe.
With the latest directive from the
government of Suu Kyi banning the use of the ‘Rohingya’ term, it is highly
doubtful that the deplorable condition of this most persecuted people will
improve any time soon.
The Buddhist monks of the fascist
organization Ma Ba Tha are also making sure that there is no let down on the
Rohingya problem whom they want either eliminated inside or forced out, thus
making a mockery of their so-called peaceful religion. They have been behind
the ethnic cleansing/ genocidal drives in Myanmar against the minority Muslims
that resulted in internal displacement of nearly a million people since 2012,
let alone the torching of hundreds of Muslim towns and villages, and deaths of
thousands. They were the gay hound-dogs of the erstwhile Thein Sein’s military regime
and were very vocal against the NLD in the last election. Although their
anti-NLD campaign failed to sway the voters away who elected Suu Kyi’s party
with a landslide victory, as a powerful and revered group in this Buddhist
majority country, the fascist monks continue to rekindle the flames of
intolerance and hatred to create problem for the new government. Typical
of the genocidal maniacs of the past, they deny the very existence of the
targeted victim – the Rohingya people.
In recent weeks, hundreds of
demonstrators, including Buddhist monks, denounced the United States for its
use of the term Rohingya to describe Myanmar’s stateless Muslim community
during a protest outside of the U.S. embassy in Yangon on Thursday. The
demonstration was sparked by a statement from the embassy last week expressing
condolences for an estimated 21 people, who media said were Rohingya, who
drowned off the coast of Rakhine State and came just a day after President Htin
Kyaw accepted the credentials of the new U.S. Ambassador, Scot Marciel.
“Today, we, from here, want to
declare to the U.S. embassy and the ambassador to Myanmar, to all the other
countries, that there is no Rohingya in our country,” Parmaukkha, a monk and
member of the hardline Buddhist group Ma Ba Tha, told about 300 people who
gathered on a busy road across from the embassy compound. “If the U.S. accepts
the term ‘Rohingya,’ you (U.S.) should take them back to your country.”
Just imagine the audacity of these
fascist monks who have hijacked Buddhism!
A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy
said the United States supports the right to demonstrate and added that “around
the world, people have the ability to self-identify”.
More importantly, Ambassador Marciel
said on Tuesday he will keep using the term
Rohingya for the persecuted Muslim minority, even after the government
controlled by Suu Kyi asked him to refrain from it. “Our position globally and
our international practice is to recognize that communities anywhere have the
ability to choose what they should be called… and we respect that,” said
Marciel, in response to a question on whether he intended to continue using the
term Rohingya.
He added that this has been
Washington’s policy before and that the administration intended to stick to it.
It takes moral courage for a new ambassador to restate its government’s policy
on such an ‘unpopular’ matter. My sincere appreciation and salutation
to the Ambassador for his courage to stand for what is right.
The US Embassy’s stand on the
Rohingya issue is morally right and laudable. Denial of the right to
self-identify is tantamount to serious crime, e.g., genocide, and should never
be taken lightly.
In a recent interview with Frontier
at his Yangon home on March 26, the former chief minister of Arakan State, Gen. Maung Maung Ohn, was quoted to have
said that the 2012 violence should never be repeated. This is a delayed
realization from a former top official of the government but a good one,
nonetheless. If they are really serious to avoid a repeat of the genocidal
crimes, they must understand that the Burmese government’s rejection of Rohingya
claims to self-identification along with discriminatory citizenship and other
laws fuels public animosity toward the group and encourages repressive local
regulations.
The Rohingyas of Myanmar expect
better from the Suu Kyi’s government. They expect her to stand for what is
right, away from the Buddhist mob culture of hatred and intolerance against the
persecuted Muslim minorities. Before leaving office, outgoing President Thein
Sein lifted the state of emergency in Arakan State
that had been imposed following the outbreak of genocidal violence against the
Rohingya and other Muslim minorities in 2012. Yet local authorities have
maintained restrictions on the movement of Rohingya in IDP camps and in
Maungdaw and Buthidaung townships that limit their access to health care and
education, make it nearly impossible to work, and impinge on religious
freedoms. Such restrictions must be lifted immediately.
International attention has focused
on Arakan State since an estimated 31,000 Rohingya fled the region by boat in
the first half of 2015. But so far the feared resumption of the maritime exodus
of Rohingya asylum seekers and migrant workers has not materialized, partly the
result of limits on boat departures and harsh pushbacks from Bangladesh,
Malaysia and Thailand.
United Nations and European Union
officials recently stated that the drop in maritime
departures and a UN-backed government program to resettle 25,000 Rohingya in
new homes heralds an improved situation. This is premature given the fact that
Burmese government laws and policies that deny the stateless Rohingya their
rights and basic freedoms remain. The latest maritime disaster again
underscores the need to finding a genuine solution to the old Rohingya crisis
urgently. The desperate humanitarian situation and the potential for
anti-Rohingya violence needs to be urgently addressed. This is no time for
complacency.
The new government of Aung San Suu
Kyi’s National League for Democracy could markedly improve the everyday lives
of the Rohingya by removing the restrictions that led to last month’s boat
accident, and from there establish the Rohingya’s genuine inclusion in a more
rights-respecting Burma. As we have learned from history, a nonchalance
attitude towards growing fascism can be disastrous. As such, if NLD is serious
about stopping such fascistic trends, it must come hard on those fascist Ma Ba
Tha monks and their supporters within the Buddhist country. Failing this, the country
can revert back to days of targeted pogroms again, thus seriously tampering its
much needed economic growth through investments from the international
community.
But will Suu Kyi tighten the screw
against the criminal Ma Ba Tha? That question remains unanswered now.
Op
Ed Eurasia View
No comments:
Post a Comment