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China ready to give Bangladesh a higher priority in diplomacy: Ambassador

how can you ask others to take someone they dont identify with, by force? having war with Myanmar...... even Sheikh Hasina doesnt think Rohongyas are of BD origin.
Ok great... throw away everybody from certain ethnic group and then ask the host country to make them idemtify themselves. Does Bangladesh rule Rakhine and do BD have papers?
Nobody in right mind will trust Myanmar and its government. UNHCR is already working for identification of refugess. Its MM who has to take them back and give them appropriate papers so that they dont have to come back as refugee again.
 
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Democracy does not create puppet, autocracy does. People will kick them out.
lot of people think Sheik Hasina is an Indian puppet , why she still stay in power. what system a country run cant justify what yoi just mentioned.
 
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are Rohingyas have same ancestor with Bengalis?
Bengalis have too many ancestry. Rohingyas do have similar ancestry as southern Bangladesh but heavily mixed with Rakhine population through inter marriage.

lot of people think Sheik Hasina is an Indian puppet , why she still stay in power. what system a country run cant justify what yoi just mentioned.
She is not an Indian puppet. 10 people in PDF does not make entire Bangladesh.
She is a Bengali nationalist and she has keen interest in Bengali inhabitant areas in India. Same true for Mamata of West Bengal who is a Bengali nationalist too. These people wanted a secular greater independent bengal in 1947.

Most US puppets are democracies, no , all of them actually.
No, all puppets are actually autocrat.
 
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Japan, South Korea, UK, Canada... they call themselves democracies, we all know they are just US puppets and do US biddings.
they are forced, no one wanna be puppet.

Ok great... throw away everybody from certain ethnic group and then ask the host country to make them idemtify themselves. Does Bangladesh rule Rakhine and do BD have papers?
Nobody in right mind will trust Myanmar and its government. UNHCR is already working for identification of refugess. Its MM who has to take them back and give them appropriate papers so that they dont have to come back as refugee again.
they will not obey, i know the personality of Burmese. as you said, Rohingyas is mix of Southern Bengalis and Rokhine locals, then they shall be part of Myanmar.

i know that once Myanmar goverment try to identify Rohingyas in 1960s and 1970s, and they halted the process for some reasons.
 
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they will not obey, i know the personality of Burmese. as you said, Rohingyas is mix of Southern Bengalis and Rokhine locals, then they shall be part of Myanmar.

i know that once Myanmar goverment try to identify Rohingyas in 1960s and 1970s, and they halted the process for some reasons.

One misunderstanding needs to be clarified. YOu are saying local Rakhine... but not local Rohingya. But in northern Rakhine Rohingyas are local. They were never migrant. These people will never accept the tag of migrant.. never. I can give you documents that says they are the original inhabitant of that region.
Its not the matter of only legal status but also political and social status.
 
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and ive to admit there is conflict between Buddhists and Muslim in Myanmar.
 
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I wonder what happened @bluesky He sounds more Japanese than Bangladeshi.

Okay, this is not needed. I know he started it first, and I hope the mods will do something about it. But no need insult Japanese culture or any other culture. Not to mention he is not a Japanese to begin with.
Bluesky wish he was Japanese. At least Japanese live a hell of a good life when compared to Bangladeshi
 
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are Rohingyas have same ancestor with Bengalis?

Yes.

Oh!!! This is why hundreds and thousands of shameless Chinese men and women, mother and son, brother and sister come in pairs to beg. Men go to work in the kitchen and the women ask to sleep with the Japanese men for a small money.

You b*stards had very cunningly invited the Japanese private companies to bring in their technology, money, and machines to invest in China when Japan was suffering from an economic recession.

Then at an opportune time very conveniently you stole their physical and intellectual properties and kicked them out of China. This is why the Japanese say, "Do not trust a Chinese. He can sell his own mother to benefit himself". Bloody uncultured, ungrateful and uncivilized monkeys!!

But, can you ever overshadow Japan, at least in the next 1000 years, by raising your standard of living? You will remain a 3rd rate country living by eating insects and snakes.

M*nkey China is just using BD to hook this small country. It is supporting Burma because it has already hooked it and taking out Burmese gas for free. China needs the US kicking on its *** to get civilized. I think you are right now enjoying the trade friction with the US with a broad smile. Your paper dollars will just dry away within a few years.

Woah dude, go easy on the Sake.

@dy1022 @Beast @TaiShang @Chinese-Dragon @rott ... look at what a Bangladeshi thinks of you.
 
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i mean China shall show respect to the passion BD has towards Rohingyas, and also have to support Aung Sang's independant foreigh policy.
i think Aung sang Sukyi is not the manipulator behind the stage, the Myanmar military is. Aung san is somehow coerced to stay silent. or she will be kicked out. im not saying Aung san is an saint l, but she is a realist.

could you explain how ?
i just can, i dont know why.

i.hope Myanmar can give citizenship to the Rohongyas who identify with Myanmar, it will prevent the growth of hate.

and save lots of trouble for everyone in this region. and the west shall also cut support to the seperatists in the North of Rokhine state .
overall, Myanmar people feel unsafe when they have to face so many powerful militia ethnic minority in their country.

containment and isolation is not.the proper way to solve the problem, Myanmar goverment shall realize it.
 
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Rohingya crisis reinforce China-Myanmar bonds
tul Aneja
BEIJING , SEPTEMBER 15, 2018 19:02 IST



China-Myanmar%2BOil-Gas%2Bpipelines.jpg

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) got a high octane boost last week, when Myanmar — facing the heat from the West because of the Rohingya refugee crisis — inked an agreement with Beijing to establish a cross border economic corridor.

The 1,700-km corridor will provide China yet another node to access the Indian Ocean. Already Gwadar port — one of the terminal points of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) — has become Beijing’s star gateway to the Arabian Sea.

“The China Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC) can become a major factor in lifting the economies of landlocked southwest China, which include the Provinces of Yunnan and Sichuan, by providing them a passage to the Indian Ocean,” says Long Xingchun, Associate Professor of China’s West Normal University, in a conversation with The Hindu.

The CMEC will also reduce Beijing’s trade and energy reliance on the Malacca straits — the narrow passage that links the Indian Ocean with the Pacific. Chinese planners worry that the military domination over the Malacca straits of the United States — a country with which it is already engaged in a trade war — can threaten one of China’s major economic lifeline.

The CMEC will run from Yunnan Province of China to Mandalay in Central Myanmar. From there it will head towards Yangon, before terminating at the Kyaukpyu Special Economic Zone (SEZ) on the Bay of Bengal. “The corridor connects Yunnan and three important economic centres in Myanmar… and aims to promote the economic integration of the region,” says China’s state-run Global Times.

China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Beijing’s top planning body that signed a memorandum of understanding with Myanmar on September 9, stitched the CMEC with the BRI. The CMEC will focus on 12 areas including basic infrastructure, construction, manufacturing, agriculture, transport, finance, human resource development and telecommunications. Joint Working Groups and committees will be formed to implement the projects.

In August, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) opened a new centre in Yangon, which could help fund some of the CMEC driven projects, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

Three factors, including the ascending pressure on Naypyidaw from human rights groups and western governments appear to have reinforced the China-Myanmar bond.

“Domestically, the Myanmarese economy is growing very slowly because of the lack of investment. Globally, there has been talk of sanctions against Myanmar over the Rohingya issue. So more than ever, the country needs China,” Global Times quoted Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences professor Zhu Zhenming as saying.

India’s tepid enthusiasm for the previously proposed Bangladesh China India Myanmar (BCIM) economic corridor also appears to have persuaded China to head for the CMEC. “The CMEC was proposed during Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s visit to Myanmar last November, because India has not been acting on the BCIM sub regional cooperation proposal. So it is better for China to go for bilateral cooperation with Myanmar and simultaneously wait for India’s participation,” says Prof. Long.

The Chinese academic spotlighted that in the future, the CMEC can be integrated with a much larger connectivity network including the BCIM or the Kunming to Kolkata corridor, as well as the India proposed Bhutan Bangladesh India Nepal (BBIN) initiative — a major plank of New Delhi’s Act East Policy.

China is also backing the CMEC to impart greater focus to its energy security. Crude deliveries through a 771-km China Myanmar oil pipeline from Kyaukpyu to Kunming, capital of China’s Yunnan Province,

began in 2017. A parallel natural gas pipeline from Myanmar also terminates in Yunnan.

Despite its promise, the CMEC faces serious security challenges. The corridor will run through insurgency hit areas in the Shan and Kachin States. Unsurprisingly, Myanmar’s State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi met with Chinese Defence Minister Wei Fenghe in Naypyidaw in June for talks.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/inter...force-china-myanmar-bonds/article24955917.ece
 
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@dy1022 @Beast @TaiShang @Chinese-Dragon @rott ... look at what a Bangladeshi thinks of you.

Angry Taliban youth. :D

Rohingya crisis reinforce China-Myanmar bonds
tul Aneja
BEIJING , SEPTEMBER 15, 2018 19:02 IST



China-Myanmar%2BOil-Gas%2Bpipelines.jpg

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) got a high octane boost last week, when Myanmar — facing the heat from the West because of the Rohingya refugee crisis — inked an agreement with Beijing to establish a cross border economic corridor.

The 1,700-km corridor will provide China yet another node to access the Indian Ocean. Already Gwadar port — one of the terminal points of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) — has become Beijing’s star gateway to the Arabian Sea.

“The China Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC) can become a major factor in lifting the economies of landlocked southwest China, which include the Provinces of Yunnan and Sichuan, by providing them a passage to the Indian Ocean,” says Long Xingchun, Associate Professor of China’s West Normal University, in a conversation with The Hindu.

The CMEC will also reduce Beijing’s trade and energy reliance on the Malacca straits — the narrow passage that links the Indian Ocean with the Pacific. Chinese planners worry that the military domination over the Malacca straits of the United States — a country with which it is already engaged in a trade war — can threaten one of China’s major economic lifeline.

The CMEC will run from Yunnan Province of China to Mandalay in Central Myanmar. From there it will head towards Yangon, before terminating at the Kyaukpyu Special Economic Zone (SEZ) on the Bay of Bengal. “The corridor connects Yunnan and three important economic centres in Myanmar… and aims to promote the economic integration of the region,” says China’s state-run Global Times.

China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Beijing’s top planning body that signed a memorandum of understanding with Myanmar on September 9, stitched the CMEC with the BRI. The CMEC will focus on 12 areas including basic infrastructure, construction, manufacturing, agriculture, transport, finance, human resource development and telecommunications. Joint Working Groups and committees will be formed to implement the projects.

In August, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) opened a new centre in Yangon, which could help fund some of the CMEC driven projects, China’s state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

Three factors, including the ascending pressure on Naypyidaw from human rights groups and western governments appear to have reinforced the China-Myanmar bond.

“Domestically, the Myanmarese economy is growing very slowly because of the lack of investment. Globally, there has been talk of sanctions against Myanmar over the Rohingya issue. So more than ever, the country needs China,” Global Times quoted Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences professor Zhu Zhenming as saying.

India’s tepid enthusiasm for the previously proposed Bangladesh China India Myanmar (BCIM) economic corridor also appears to have persuaded China to head for the CMEC. “The CMEC was proposed during Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi’s visit to Myanmar last November, because India has not been acting on the BCIM sub regional cooperation proposal. So it is better for China to go for bilateral cooperation with Myanmar and simultaneously wait for India’s participation,” says Prof. Long.

The Chinese academic spotlighted that in the future, the CMEC can be integrated with a much larger connectivity network including the BCIM or the Kunming to Kolkata corridor, as well as the India proposed Bhutan Bangladesh India Nepal (BBIN) initiative — a major plank of New Delhi’s Act East Policy.

China is also backing the CMEC to impart greater focus to its energy security. Crude deliveries through a 771-km China Myanmar oil pipeline from Kyaukpyu to Kunming, capital of China’s Yunnan Province,

began in 2017. A parallel natural gas pipeline from Myanmar also terminates in Yunnan.

Despite its promise, the CMEC faces serious security challenges. The corridor will run through insurgency hit areas in the Shan and Kachin States. Unsurprisingly, Myanmar’s State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi met with Chinese Defence Minister Wei Fenghe in Naypyidaw in June for talks.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/inter...force-china-myanmar-bonds/article24955917.ece

I think this stands for China's "in your face" to some Taliban wannabes. :partay:
 
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