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Diplomacy: Myanmar has outsmarted Bangladesh

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Diplomacy: Myanmar has outsmarted Bangladesh
Dr. Dilara Choudhury
Entry of as many as four hundred thousand Rohingya refugees, following an attack on Myanmar’s security forces by Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) on August 28, 2017, and consequent genocide of Rohingyas by its security forces, Bangladesh is confronted with serious and numerous non-traditional security threats to its territorial integrity and sovereignty, and has become involved in global politics.

Naturally, questions abound about Government’s non-awareness of a calamity of such magnitude as well as its policies which could have prevented the country’s gargantuan security risks.
Dhaka’s obliviousness
Usually a given country’s security risks are tackled by being vigilant about international political development, especially the ones which may threaten its security, and thereby, undertaking a pro-active diplomacy, so that the conflict may be avoided. In case of Rohingya problem with Myanmar, Dhaka adopted none of the above, though the warning signals rang since late 1970s.

Dhaka fumbled twice in the 1970s and in the 1990s as it agreed to Myanmar’s conditional acceptance of their nationals without addressing the core issue, i.e. determining the criteria for Rohingya identity. Country with foresight and sagacity would have taken a note of it, especially in the 1990s, as the Rohingyas’ by then, had lost their Burmese nationality and basic rights through its reformed 1982 citizenship law and became virtually stateless.

It was not realized that if they are driven out of their country of residence as stateless Bengali illegal immigrants, their natural destination would be Bangladesh. However, till then Myanmar’s intransient attitude about Rohingya issue, though visible, had not yet become rigid. As evidenced now, Myanmar was simply buying time and an opportune time to deal with the Rohingya issue in their own way.

What perplexes us is Dhaka’s obliviousness even when UN and Human Rights Organizations were criticizing Myanmar’s Rohingya atrocities and predicting that an ‘ethnic cleansing’ was on the way following the renewed violence against the Rohingyas by Myanmar’s security forces in 2012.

It is really mindboggling that even then Dhaka did not internationalize the issue by raising it in various regional forums like SAARC, ASEAN, BIMSTEC, and keep our friendly and powerful regional countries such as China, India and Russia informed.
Lack of pro-active diplomacy
While continuing bilaterally with Myanmar, Dhaka’s foremost strategy should have been to undertake a vibrant, pro-active and preventive diplomacy, and convince the world that Rohingyas and Bangladeshis may have similar ethnic identity and religion but they are not Bengali immigrants as they have been living in Rakhine state (Arakan) since 9th century, and highlight its concerns about its potential destabilization, probably triggering a regional one, due to Myanmar’s actions against the Rohingyas.

Instead Dhaka has been all through and till recently was mostly busy with the repatriation procedure (Prothom Alo, Sept. 17, 2017).

Obviously, it is understood that the tremendous outcry in national and international arenas for Rohingya genocide in Myanmar and immediate support by the Islamic countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Turkey and Maldives, which emanated due to emotional bond of a common religion, and those from the U.S. and European countries arising mostly for their humanitarian concerns and, cynical as it may be, lack of strategic and economic interest in Myanmar, especially after the U.S. withdrawal from TPP, and not due to Dhaka’s pro-active diplomacy.

Needless to say that Dhaka’s lack of diplomatic capacity has been responsible for the situation the country faces today. Bangladesh is friendless due to the way its foreign policy has been conducted. After years of diplomacy, how is it possible that Dhaka has no support on Rohingya issue, which is threatening its state security, by none of the powerful regional countries such as China, India and Russia?

Stand taken by these regional powers has glaringly highlighted Dhaka’s diplomatic debacle. It is, thus, crystal clear that none considered Bangladesh worth supporting for its inherent strategic and economic values, which would have served their own national interest –strategic and economic. That was not to be, especially in case of India and China.
Dhaka’s ‘India first’ policy
The fact of the matter is that Dhaka has been unsuccessful in maintaining a policy of equidistance from India and China, like that of Myanmar, which was possible due to its geo-strategic location. Bangladesh’s geo-strategic location is crucial for both the regional powers, no less than Myanmar, for their ambition to dominate Indian Ocean and become a world power. In that quest, both India and China need to have a foothold in Dhaka as Dhaka sits centrally along India initiated BCIM corridor and in a strategic position along China’s 21st century Maritime Silk Road.

By maximizing Dhaka’s geostrategic location through diplomatic endeavours, Bangladesh should have wooed both so that one would vie other in order to get Dhaka’s favour. Instead, Dhaka tilted heavily towards Delhi, especially since 2014, with its informal “India first” policy initiated by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to take care of India’s core security and economic interests (Xiar, Carnegie, New Delhi), that alienated China as its security interest was ignored.

China’s stand on Rohingya is, thus, understandable. But the people of Bangladesh are exacerbated by India’s role as there seems to be no quid pro quo in India-Bangladesh bilateral relations. As a result, Bangladesh find itself helpless as it has no leverage on its most trusted friend.
Myanmar and Rohingya Issue
While Dhaka was grappling with Rohingya problem, Myanmar, on the other hand, has been perusing its objective of Rohingya annihilation by taking systematic steps bilaterally and globally. Bilaterally, while dealing with Rohingyas’ identity issue, Myanmar satisfied Bangladesh by mutually agreeing that the refugees would be called neither Bengalis nor Rohingyas implicitly denying their historical claim, which kept Bangladesh at bay. Subsequently by emphasizing on their Muslim identity by Suu Kyi helped Myanmar to convince the world that Rohingyas are terrorists – a ploy, which would be bought by all – the West, China, India, and Russia as well, all of whom are tackling Islamic insurgencies in their own countries. The reason de tre, thus, was in place so that in the name of curbing terrorism Myanmar could wage genocide of Rohingyas.

However, China, India and Russia did not fall in line with Myanmar only due to their own insurgency problems as the military junta of Myanmar, demonstrating its extraordinary capacity in conducting global politics, embarked on a pro-active diplomacy. Sensing the emergence of a world order, not in place yet, in the form of China-Russia axis vis-a-vis India-Japan axis backed by a retreating pivotal power, the US, Myanmar’s policy of non-alignment, in this regard, prompted it to keep close ties with all major Asian powers.
Its dramatic success in wooing both China and India by accommodating strategic and economic interest of both is discernable as both are trying to please Myanmar in order to curb the influence of the other. Russia, too, became an ally as a potential partner of the possible emerging world order. Myanmar’s confidence in China and Russia has been well founded as both are supporting Myanmar all the way to UN Security Council, a body that has the power to punish Myanmar. Myanmar, thus, by setting the stage both bilaterally and internationally, lashed out with full vigour.
A friendless Bangladesh
As a friendless country, Bangladesh now will have to deal with this calamity, most probably, on its own. Suu Kyi’s recent address to her nation does not augur well for Bangladesh. She has been ambivalent all throughout her speech including the implementation Koffe Anan report as she is trying to dilute it by appointing a national Commission to look into the matter.

Bangladesh now needs to come together, evaluate its national politics as well as its foreign policy if it wants to live as a sovereign and independent country.

Professor Dilara Chowdhury is former faculty member of Jahangir Nagar University, Department of Government and politics and a political analyst
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Who says, Bd is friendless, when its foreign policy slogan is, "Friendship with every one and enmity with none." Who devised this phrase I do not know. But, it is time BD discard it to the dustbin with a new slogan that can sustain independence.
inda was only hope and its right india now stand with Myanmar . so its friendless BD
 
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RSS complicity in Rohingya Muslim genocide
Abdul Majid Zargar
Countercurrents.org

A SILENT genocide of Myanmar Muslims is in progress. Such is the urgency shown by Burmese government to annihilate its Rohingya Muslims that it has even used Gunship helicopters to fire lethal and heavy ammunition on fleeing Muslims. The international community is a mute spectator to the organized holocaust and 57 Muslim Countries, except with the honorable exception of Turkey, is watching the carnage with disbelieving eyes. UN has issued a warning to Mynamar sans any action. It has also issued an advisory to Myanmar to accord a legal status to Country’s Muslims without any response.

Indian Prime Minster, Narendra Modi, in his recent visit to Myanmar, has endorsed and supported the Burmese leadership in dealing with the unfolding humanitarian crisis. This amounts to a clear signal to the leadership to go ahead with its ethnic cleansing pogrom. In an earlier tweet, Modi had extended cooperation to ruling dispensation to deal, among other things, with counter-terrorism (read Muslim persecution) operations.
RSS wedded to its ideology
People who expected a different response from Modi tend to forget that he is basically and essentially an RSS man wedded to its anti-Muslim ideology and bound by an oath to spread it nationally and internationally. And the present anti-Muslim pogrom in Myanmar has definite & explicit connections with Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) founded in 1925. Widely regarded as the parent organisation of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the RSS is one of the principal organizations of the Sangh Parivar group.

Traditionally Buddhism has remained a peaceful religion with around 500 million followers around the globe. But in India’s vicinity, RSS has made deep inroads to radicalize the Buddhist society in Myanmar, Sri-Lanka and our own Ladakh. To achieve the objective, RSS and its tributaries use the time tested weapon of spreading falsified version of history to convince them about the injustice meted out to Buddhists during Mughal empire rule. The self-exiled Buddhist community from Tibet and living in Himachal Pradesh is also used as grist to the propaganda mill of RSS. Incidentally the capital of Tibetian Govt. in exile is in Macleod Gunj, a small hill resort in Himachal Pradesh.
RSS has a branch in Myanmar
Few people know that RSS has a branch in Myanmar fully beholden and dedicated to promotion of its wicked ideology. It is known as Sanatan Dharma Swayamsevak Sangh (SDSS). This organization has developed close relations and rapport with military dictators in Myanmar who have propped up characters like Ashin Wirathu to propagate hatred for Muslims in the country. This organization is freely allowed to indulge in political activities. How close RSS is to the military junta can be measured from the following report which appeared in ‘Organiser , the official organ of the Indian RSS, in its February 28 and March 5, 2000 issues:

“The 50th anniversary of the Sanatan Dharma Swayamsevak Sangh (SDSS) was held at the National Theatre on Mayoma Kyaung Street, Yagnon, recently. Secretary of the State Peace and Development Council, Lt. Gen. Tin Oo attended the meeting. The programme was attended by ministers and senior military officers. Minister for Commerce Brig. Gen. Pyi Sone; Minister for Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement, Maj. Gen. Sein Htwa; Minister for Health, Maj. Gen. Ket Sein were among the prominent persons who attended the function…The Secretary delivered speech at the function.

This report appeared with two photographs. In one photograph five military Generals including second in command of the military junta, Lt. Gen. Tin Oo, were seen standing on the stage in the midst of SDSS leadership wearing khaki shorts. In the other photograph leading lights of the Burmese military junta were seen sitting in the front row of the auditorium.
‘Bodo Bala Sena’ in Sri Lanka
Besides Myanmar, RSS has also made a deadly alliance with ultra-orthodox Buddhist organization ‘Bodo Bala Sena’(BBS) in Sri Lanka for cleansing minorities in general and Muslims in particular.
The marriage of ideological convenience with this anti-Muslim extremist organization can be gauged from the following Facebook post dated March 28, 2013 of Mr. Ram Madahav, one of the important functionaries of RSS.

“The Muslim population in Sri Lanka is growing fast…There are mosques and madrassas sprouting everywhere in the country. A rough estimate suggests that of the 1.2 million Muslims, every 50 households have a mosque. In Colombo itself a new magnificent mosque is coming up, so are in many other places. Increasing number of ‘burqa’-clad women and skull cap-wearing men can be sighted on the streets of Sri Lankan cities and towns now.”

Ram Madhav also noted that Muslims in Sri Lanka have been insisting on halal products. He noted approvingly that “the BBS essentially talks about protecting the Buddhist culture of the country from foreign religions. By this it also means the Christian missionaries who are trying to convert people”. He was happy to note that “the BBS has maintained that Hindus and Buddhists of the country should work together on these issues.” He ended by commending, “So far, the issues raked up by the BBS are worthy of active and sympathetic consideration”.

On Twitter, Madhav wrote: “Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) is able to capture the attention of the Buddhist population of Sri Lanka.” Bodu Bala Sena: A new Buddhist Movement in SRI LANKA.
The relations between Sri Lankan Buddists & RSS can further be measured from the statement of Sri lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesing when he visited India in September 2015. At his only public address, he said: “There were only two appointments in Delhi I wanted to confirm: one with Prime Minister Modi, and the other with the India Foundation.” India Foundation is a Delhi based core strategic RSS think tank.
RSS spreads hate among Ladakhi Buddists
In our own state, RSS is spreading hate & venom among the Ladakhi Buddists. As Ajay Shukla writes in rediff.com on April 21, 2016:

“Identity politics have spread to Ladakh, with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh instigating Buddhist groups there against the Muslims who comprise half of Ladakh’s population.
We, should, therefore, be least surprised if we witness more anti-Muslim pogroms in Sri Lanka, Ladakh etc. in near future.
The author is a practicing chartered Accountant. Feedback: abdulmajidzargar@gmail.com
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Rohingya crisis dents Myanmar hopes of Western investment boom
Reuters
Published at 10:55 AM September 22, 2017
Last updated at 10:56 AM September 22, 2017
Rohingya-4.jpg

Rohingya refugees walk on a muddy path at Thaingkhali makeshift refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh Reuters
More than 400,000 Rohingya entered Bangladesh to escape a military counterinsurgency offensive in Myanmar
When officials from Myanmar’s commercial capital Yangon toured six European countries in June, they were hoping to drum up investment in transport, energy and education.

Instead, they were bombarded with questions about the country’s treatment of the Rohingya Muslim minority, who have long complained of persecution by the Buddhist majority in the oil-rich, ethnically divided, western state of Rakhine.

“In each of every country, that issue was always brought up,” Hlaing Maw Oo, secretary of Yangon City Development Committee, told Reuters after the 16-day trip.

The situation in Rakhine has worsened dramatically since then, with more than 400,000 Rohingya fleeing to Bangladesh to escape a military counterinsurgency offensive the United Nations has described as “ethnic cleansing”.

Western trade and investment in Myanmar is small, but there were hopes that a series of reforms this year would prise open an economy stunted by international sanctions and decades of mismanagement under military rule.

With most sanctions now lifted, an expected flood of Western money was seen as a key dividend from the transition to civilian rule under Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. Regional diplomats saw it balancing China’s growing influence over its neighbour.

But Suu Kyi has been beset by international criticism for saying little about human rights abuses against the Rohingya, and lawyers, consultants and lobbyists say the European and US companies that had been circling are now wary of the reputational risks of investing in the country.

Louis Yeung, managing principal of Yangon-based investment firm Faircap Partners, said one of his business partners – a listed, US-based food and beverage company – decided to hold off its plan to enter the Myanmar market for three to five years, citing factors including slower-than-expected reforms and the Rohingya crisis.

“Their conclusion is that it wasn’t the right time for them,” he said. “They want to see more traction from the government and Rakhine is not helpful.”
On hold
The pressure has been growing in recent months, even on existing investors, with rights group AFD International calling on foreign firms to stop investing in Myanmar.

A small group of investors in US oil major Chevron (CVX.N) filed an unsuccessful motion at its annual general meeting urging it to pull out of its production sharing contract with a state-run firm to explore for oil and gas, while Norwegian telecoms firm Telenor (TEL.OL), which runs a mobile network in Myanmar, issued a statement calling for human rights protection.

Chevron declined to comment on its investment in Myanmar, while Telenor did not respond to several requests for comment.

Bernd Lange, chair of the European Parliament Committee on International Trade, said last week his delegation postponed a visit to Myanmar indefinitely, saying the human rights situation “does not allow a fruitful discussion on a potential EU-Myanmar investment agreement”.

Khin Aung Tun, vice-chairman of the Myanmar Tourism Federation, told Reuters global firms planning to hold conferences in Myanmar were now considering other locations.

“People were just starting to see Myanmar as a ‘good news’ story,” said Dane Chamorro, head of South East Asia at Control Risks, a global risk consultancy.

“Now you can imagine a boardroom in which someone mentions Myanmar and someone else says ‘hold on, I’ve just seen something on Myanmar on TV: villages burned down, refugees, etc’.”

In an interview published in Nikkei Asia Review on Thursday, Suu Kyi acknowledged it was “natural” for foreign investors to be concerned, but repeated her view that economic development was the key to solving poor Rakhine’s long-standing problems.

“So investments would actually help make the situation better,” she said.
In china‘s orbit
Myanmar’s $70 billion economy should be a strong investment proposition for Western firms. It boasts large oil and gas reserves and natural resources such as rubies, jade and timber. Wages are low and its youthful population of more than 50 million is eager for retail and manufacturing jobs.

In April, Myanmar passed a long-awaited investment law, simplifying procedures and granting foreign investors equal treatment to the locals. A game-changing law allowing foreigners to buy stakes in local firms is expected later this year.

“The investment conditions were improving,” said Dustin Daugherty, ASEAN lead for business intelligence at Dezan Shira & Associates, a consultancy for foreign investors in Asia.

Myanmar’s economy may not suffer much, however, if Western firms shun the country – or even if their governments were to reimpose some sanctions, although that appears unlikely for now.

Suu Kyi has sought to deepen relations with China at a time when Beijing is keen to push projects that fit with its “Belt and Road” initiative, which aims to stimulate trade by investment in infrastructure throughout Asia and beyond.

Myanmar trades with China as much as it does with its next four biggest partners: Singapore, Thailand, Japan and India. None of that top five participated in previous sanctions.

Trade with the United States is only about $400 million and US investment is just 0.5% of the total. Europe accounts for around a 10th of investment, while China and Hong Kong make up more than a third, and Singapore and Thailand another third.

Than Aung Kyaw, Deputy Director General of Myanmar’s Directorate of Investment and Company Administration, told Reuters European investors might have “second thoughts”, but he expected Asian investors to stay put.

China is already in talks to sell electricity to energy-hungry Myanmar and pushing for preferential access to a strategic port on the Bay of Bengal. In April, the two countries reached an agreement on an oil pipeline that pumps oil across Myanmar to southwest China.

“It is going to feed Aung San Suu Kyi straight into the hands of (Chinese President) Xi Jinping,” said John Blaxland, director at the ANU Southeast Asia Institute and head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/business/economy/2017/09/22/216819/
 
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Dhaka seeks Moscow’s engagement in Rohingya solutions
3 UK MPs say Rohingya crisis a man-made tragedy
Diplomatic Corresondent | Published: 00:01, Sep 22,2017 | Updated: 00:43, Sep 22,2017
Bangladesh has requested Russia to play role for sustainable solutions of Rohingya crisis stirred up by violence of Myanmar authorities in Rakhine.

Three Conservative Party members of the British Parliament on Thursday described the Rohingya situation as a ‘man-made disaster’ and stressed the need for expedited measures for stopping violence in Rakhine so that the victims could go back home.

Foreign minister AH Mahmood on Wednesday made the request to his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov in their meeting on the sidelines of the 72nd session of the UN General Assembly in New York, officials said.

Lavrov told Mahmood Ali that Russia was aware of Rohingya situation. He said Russia would engage with Bangladesh on solutions to Rohingya crisis.

The ministers ‘exchanged opinions’ on current issues of the regional and bilateral agenda, Russian foreign ministry said in a release without any elaboration.

Nearly 4,29,000 minority Rohingyas, mostly women, children and aged people, fled violence and persecution during ‘security operations’ by Myanmar military in Rakhine to Bangladesh till Thursday since August 25, raising a total number of undocumented Myanmar nationals and registered refugees in Bangladesh to about 8,49,000.

Three British Conservative Party lawmakers Anne Margaret Main, Paul Stuart Scully and Will Quince visited Rohingya victims in Cox’s Bazar.

At a briefing, Anne Main said that she was shocked after hearing and seeing horrific situation of Rakhine people fled violence in Rakhine State of Myanmar.

Main said, ‘Their parents, husbands and kids were murdered. They were driven out of the country. They were abandoned by Burma.’

Main also said that a female victim told her that her husband and a son were murdered, their home burnt and she walked for five days to find shelter in Bangladesh.

‘There is no question in my mind that it is ethnic cleansing,’ she added.

Will Quince said that Rohingya situation was clearly a ‘man-made tragedy.’
Paul Stuart Scully said that everyone they talked alleged that Myanmar army men committed murder, arson and violence. They placed landmines along the borders.

It ‘is required’ to put pressure on Myanmar military chief for stopping violence, he said.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/24596/dhaka-seeks-moscows-engagement-in-rohingya-solutions
 
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Prime Minister failed to convince global leaders: BNP
Special Correspondent

BNP on Wednesday alleged that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has failed to convince global leaders to take an effective initiative for resolving the Rohingya crisis.

Speaking at a human chain programme protesting the genocide against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims BNP’s senior joint secretary general Ruhul Kabir Rizvi said “over four lakh Rohingya Muslims took shelter in Bangladesh fleeing from Myanmar to save their lives in the face of brutal torture on them. They’re now suffering badly for lack of food, water and treatment. But the Prime Minister has failed to portrait the inhuman condition of Rohingyas among the international community,”

The Human chair was organised by Jatiyatabadi Ulema Dal in front of the Jatiya Press Club.
Rizvi said on this occasion that after conversation with US president Donald Trump Sheikh Hasina said she does not expect any help from him over Rohingya issue. “This means she couldn’t make him understand the real situation. It’s not only the Prime Minister’s failure, but also her incompetence to persuade the global leaders.”

He said even the friendly countries are not with Bangladesh over Rohingya issue due to the government’s wrong policy. “Now she (PM) has no foreign friend as she’s taken an anti-mass policy within the country.” The BNP leader said the Prime Minister is not active to resolve the Rohingya crisis and repatriate those Myanmar citizens taken shelter in Bangladesh.

He also criticised Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi for not condemning ethnic cleansing by the military and giving any guideline to solve Rohingya problem in her address to the nation on Tuesday. “We’ve got disappointed with her unjustified speech. She didn’t talk about repression on Rohingya. Her speech was against humanity.”

The BNP leader said Suu Kyi lied in her speech to the nation as she is now representing the blood thirsty Myanmar security forces.
“You (Suu Kyi) have said there was no violence in Rakhine state after September 5. How could you tell such a blatant lie being an internationally renowned leader when so many villages were torched, many people killed and so many children thrown into the Naf River over the last two weeks? How could you deny the fact?

Mentioning that Suu Kyi didn’t utter the word Rohingya in her speech, Rizvi said she described the residents of Rakhine as Muslims though Hindus also lived there and many persecuted Hindus took shelter in Bangladesh. “Apparently, she targeted Muslims and her speech exposed her attitude that Muslims has no rights to live.”

The BNP leader said Myanmar must take back Rohingyas taken shelter here following violence in that country. He alleged that the government has imported atap rice (white rice) from Myanmar to deceive people. “The country’s only five percent people eat atap rice. Though the rice is being sold in trucks under OMS, people are not buying it.”
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By maximizing Dhaka’s geostrategic location through diplomatic endeavours, Bangladesh should have wooed both so that one would vie other in order to get Dhaka’s favour. Instead, Dhaka tilted heavily towards Delhi, especially since 2014, with its informal “India first” policy initiated by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to take care of India’s core security and economic interests (Xiar, Carnegie, New Delhi), that alienated China as its security interest was ignored.

China’s stand on Rohingya is, thus, understandable. But the people of Bangladesh are exacerbated by India’s role as there seems to be no quid pro quo in India-Bangladesh bilateral relations. As a result, Bangladesh find itself helpless as it has no leverage on its most trusted friend.
I have to agree with it.

The author is a smart lady.
Indeed,Yesterday I have seen her in a round table conference.There she pointed to a serous gap in our education related to national security and foreign policy and resulting lack of skilled diplomats and strategists.She said until recently there was not a single university in Bangladesh where security studies were taught as a faculty.Still it is in a very rudimentary condition in a few university.She also pointed to the appointment of diplomats on the basis of political loyalty rather than merit.She also slammed the govt. for putting all our eggs in one basket, that is India.
 
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By maximizing Dhaka’s geostrategic location through diplomatic endeavours, Bangladesh should have wooed both so that one would vie other in order to get Dhaka’s favour. Instead, Dhaka tilted heavily towards Delhi, especially since 2014, with its informal “India first” policy initiated by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to take care of India’s core security and economic interests (Xiar, Carnegie, New Delhi), that alienated China as its security interest was ignored.

China’s stand on Rohingya is, thus, understandable. But the people of Bangladesh are exacerbated by India’s role as there seems to be no quid pro quo in India-Bangladesh bilateral relations. As a result, Bangladesh find itself helpless as it has no leverage on its most trusted friend.

Bang on. Simply put Hasina placed all her eggs in one basket, and Bangladesh is now paying the price for it.


Its dramatic success in wooing both China and India by accommodating strategic and economic interest of both is discernable as both are trying to please Myanmar in order to curb the influence of the other. Russia, too, became an ally as a potential partner of the possible emerging world order. Myanmar’s confidence in China and Russia has been well founded as both are supporting Myanmar all the way to UN Security Council, a body that has the power to punish Myanmar. Myanmar, thus, by setting the stage both bilaterally and internationally, lashed out with full vigour.

Very true. Its a remarkable diplomatic achievement by Myanmar to get both India and China on the same page. This now leaves Bangladesh with very little maneuvering space, and the likelihood seems that overcrowded Bangladesh will ultimately have to take in more and more Rohingyas in the near future.
 
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inda was only hope and its right india now stand with Myanmar . so its friendless BD
India does not stand, but has been stuck with MM by making a wrong decision when it promised to build a sea port in Sittwe of Arakan to transport goods to its landlocked northeast states. Now, India is unable to get away from MM because of this port that the Indians think something like a magic wand for the NE prosperity.

India's Sittwe approach is impractical because the 200km Sittwe-NE road will be full of terrorists, who will sabotage the moving vehicles while the goods are transported through the mountains, caves, gorges and valleys. Farakka is responsible for Indian floods and the Sittwe Port will cause the loss of miser Indian money and men by gunfire and bombing. This is how India will pay for backstabbing BD,
 
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We never lose friends, we simply learn who the real ones are
12:00 AM, September 21, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:33 PM, September 21, 2017

rohingya_crisis_4.jpg

Weary and wounded Rohingya arriving in Bangladesh. Photo: AFP Photo/Munir UZ Zaman
Brig Gen Shahedul Anam Khan ndc, psc (Retd)

The reactions of some of our "very close" friends since the outbreak of the most recent Rohingya crisis have compelled me to ask myself as to where all our good friends have gone. Hardly have we faced such a crisis situation encompassing the bilateral as well as the international domain. And hardly have we been left so high and dry by those whom we thought we could count on during a crisis such as this. While our diplomatic capacity has been put to the extreme test, and we could have fared better in this regard, our capability to deal with a humanitarian catastrophe of a magnitude never experienced in the past, is being severely stretched.

It is time to ponder deeply on the long-term implications of the Rohingya issue. It is not merely a question of more than half a million refugees taking shelter in Bangladesh. The recent influx of a huge number of refugees from Myanmar and the enormous socio-economic problems they pose should not blind us to the other associated fallout of the issue; the eventual political profile and the likely security tenor of the region cannot be lost on our foreign policy planners, if there is any such group, and the foreign office mandarins.

An ethnic minority—more than seventy-five percent of them—has been uprooted from their ancestral homes and forced to flee Myanmar to Bangladesh. For Myanmar it is the final solution as far as the Rohingyas are concerned. About that we should never have been in doubt, more so after the exodus from Rakhine in 2012. The question is: how long can Bangladesh host these people without suffering the inevitable consequences? The essential point that international public opinion, particularly the regional countries, must be made aware of is, should the military junta presiding over a sham democracy be allowed to get away with what has been recognised by the UN as ethnic cleansing? The Rohingya issue has the recipe for increased discord within that country and outside it, which will be exploited by groups with ulterior motives. And this is why we must employ all our diplomatic efforts to persuade Myanmar to take its people back and create conditions to ensure the safety and security of the Rohingyas.

The Rohingya issue is a shocking reminder that there are no permanent friends or foes, only permanent interests. And all the three of our good friends—Russia, China and India—have acted on their own national interests. The blood of the Rohingyas has little to do in shaping their policy when juxtaposed to the strategic and economic benefits of supporting Myanmar on this question.

Since the commencement of the recent violence on the Rohingyas, Suu Kyi and her government have been dispensing one lie after another. And it was a continuation of that in her shamefaced brazen speech on Tuesday. She wants the world to believe that she does not know what is causing the Rohingyas (she prefers to call them Muslims, although a large number of Hindu Rohingya families have been made victims of the state persecution) to leave the country, and needs more time to find out the “real causes”.

Although the speech has drawn, justifiably, the criticism it deserves from around the world, three of Myanmar's staunch supporters have demonstrated approbation of Suu Kyi's narrative through their comments on her speech. When after all the killings and the violence perpetrated on the Rohingyas India feels “encouraged” by her speech and China reiterates its support for the Myanmar government's action in Rakhine, and Russia doesn't find any “evidence to justify” the accusation of ethnic cleansing, it is geopolitical and economic expediency that is talking, not principles of justice or human rights.

It is also time for us to ponder why a state that has been until recently a pariah has succeeded in garnering support for its genocidal acts from the most important international and regional powers. Why is it that the military leaders of this pariah state have been given red carpet treatment in major capitals of the West, and Suu Kyi, warmly welcomed at Buckingham Palace and the White House, while they were presiding over the persecution of an ethnic minority? Perhaps the one word answer to this is realpolitik. All ideological and moral considerations have been completely cast aside for the sake of their own national interests.

Given that we are virtually isolated on this issue, a robust diplomatic offensive must be launched, but we see no sign of it. We understand that an Awami League delegation will be in Beijing shortly to meet CPC leaders in Beijing. But one would much like to see government delegations also visit the capitals of some of the countries that can have influence on the Myanmar regime. We need to drive home to the Russians that what is happening in Myanmar is not its "internal affair", as opposed to what the Russians think it is. After all, a situation that forces nearly half a million of its people to seek shelter across the border cannot be an “internal affair” of a country. China must be made to realise that their short-sighted support for Myanmar for economic considerations alone will only create a fertile ground for extremists to exploit, and that would not leave China's sensitive regions unaffected. And India must be persuaded to understand that blowing hot and cold in the same breath only compounds problems. While it has merely voiced concerns “over violence resulting in the outflow of a large number of people from that state”, its use of the “extremist” card as a handy tool to prepare grounds for expelling the Rohingyas from its territory has very serious implications for Bangladesh. Expel them to which country we ask?

And Bangladesh, for one, must realise that realpolitik is still as relevant today as it was when first enunciated in the 1520s. That to use your strategic leverage is not only pragmatic, not doing so is foolish. That asking for a just price from your neighbours for their use of your resources is not only not uncivil but a practical proposition too. Regrettably, the policy of friendship towards all does not necessarily beget the same reciprocity. And it is only in times of your need that you discover who your real friends are, as we have done to our great shock this time.
Brig Gen Shahedul Anam Khan, ndc, psc (Retd) is Associate Editor, The Daily Star.
http://www.thedailystar.net/opinion...we-simply-learn-who-the-real-ones-are-1465180
 
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