The Burmese annexed and conquered Arakan; a Burmese speaking Buddhist land. The Rohingya are migrants from an alien country that is shunned by the Arakanese people.
You can not roll back people who inhibited the land for hundreds of years when present day Myanmar was nonexistent and yet justify hundreds of years old conquest. Myanmar has opportunity to inherit both or leave. “Burmese speaking Buddhist land” is grossly extremist view and conflict with principal tenant of Buddhism. Not only that; Myanmar can NOT live with such ultra extremist view and goal “Burmese speaking Buddhist land” in a civilized world.
Why are you so obsessed with this notion that India is behind all this? The antipathy towards Rohingya in Myanmar has been around for many, many years. It does not need the encouragement of a third power to flame the situation even more. I admit I don't fully understand the complexities of India-Bangladesh relations but you seem to think (on here anyway) that India is behind every single thing that happens to Bangladesh.
“antipathy” is NOT in question here. It’s matter of great concern how india had been exploiting Myanmar internal situation to drive wedge between neighbors, in this case Bangladesh.
India is in of control current stooge regime in Bangladesh and every aspect of policy and govt decision has indian hand behind it. Since you claim you don't know enough, just stay away from the subject or educate yourself by reading threads in this forum. But for indian instigation and relation with Myanmar ethnic militant groups you need to brush up on your understanding. Which I think you already know but pretending.
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Historic trail of indian instigation in Myanmar unrest:
"In the 1980s and early 1990s, Indian intelligence adopted a conscious policy of developing close relations with rebel groups along its borders with [Myanmar],'' said Naba Kumar Singh, who heads the Myanmar studies in Manipur university in Northeast India.
''India's RAW [Research and Analysis Wing] supported the Kachins, the Chins and the Arakanese insurgents to neutralize its own northeastern militants along a long border but also to keep pressure on the [Myanmar] military regime. That changed in 1995," he says.
Once India decided to court the military junta, the Indian military started to crack down on the rebel groups it had once supported. The bases of the Chin National Front (CNF) in northeastern India's Mizoram and Manipur were raided and most of their fighters were forced to flee or were nabbed.
The Kachin Independence Army (KIA), which had received a huge consignment of weapons after its former chief Maran Brangsein visited Delhi twice and the chief of India's external intelligence RAW, were also told they could "no longer depend on Indian support".
The policy shift was controversial among the rank and file, many of whom had developed relations with rebel leaders. The RAW's late deputy chief B B Nandi actually offered to come to the defense of the 34 NUPA rebels in court because he felt they were victims of treachery.
Just before he died in Calcutta, he told this writer that he had opened the first parleys with the NUPA, the KIA and the CNF in an attempt to secure India's eastern borders with Myanmar from the "pernicious effects of insurgency, drug and weapons trade".
''These rebels served India's interest much better than [Myanmar's] military regime," Nandi told this writer.
Source:
Arakanese rebels freed from Indian jail ~ thupui
http://www.defence.pk/forums/bangla...inment-strategy-analysis-4.html#ixzz1xX739wmG