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Eight die as Rakhine militants clash with Myanmar army

This @Nilgiri guy must be very stupid. Does it make a difference if someone bashes India? India is India, and we are the offshoot country of India. People say many things in a discussion forum. But, he takes it as a personal insult. @Nilgiri is not a self-assured person.



I am happy to read that BNP finally speaks for the Rohingyas. Better late than never.
Then accept my apology in his behalf and move on. However you should also point out your guys racism calling Myanmar guys monkeys.
 
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I see you edited this. Not only is it backwards, I am willing to bet that a majority of your intelligent countrymen on this forum believe islam is dragging your country back. Moreso than they are willing to let on. Pakistan's economy is in the doldrums and its economic growth is far lower than its neighbours. Perhaps instead of ranting and raving you should support proposals to remove islam as the state religion as even the backward bangladeshis are considering doing and reduce the political power religious movements in your country enjoy. Think about it.



Yes we are.

Actually my point and your point is same. Rohingya people are not majority. But, preserving right for minority or refugee's should be there.
 
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What for these Indian poor guys are squatting? Oh my God!! The guys are defecating in the open!! But, @Nilgiri, is the picture real in the Super power India? You guys talk about Indian technology prowess when you cannot even build a toilet, even an indecent one, in your lousy country. Shame on fator fator Indians like you, @Nilgiri!!
 
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The Stateless Rohingya
8 hrs
· http://www.thestateless.com/2016/11/15/malaysia-begins-pilot-job-project-for-rohingya-refugees/
Malaysia begins pilot job project for Rohingya refugees
✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧✧
By P Prem Kumar, Anadolu Agency

Some 300 Rohingya to be allowed to work in plantation, manufacturing sectors under project whose outcome is to be assessed

...See more

Malaysia begins pilot job project for Rohingya refugees
By P Prem Kumar, Anadolu Agency Some 300 Rohingya to be allowed to work in plantation, manufacturing sectors under project whose outcome is to be assessed KUALA LUMPUR Malaysia’s government will al…
THESTATELESS.COM


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What for these Indian poor guys are squatting? Oh my God!! The guys are defecating in the open!! But, @Nilgiri, is the picture real in the Super power India? You guys talk about Indian technology prowess when you cannot even build a toilet, even an indecent one, in your lousy country. Shame on fator fator Indians like you, @Nilgiri!!

Look who's talking:



BBS STRONK

BD STRONK

No one cares about BD enough to check on BBS fake statistics, just like no one cares about removing BD from LDC status.

After all:

https://defence.pk/threads/why-bangladesh-sucks-and-will-suck-for-a-long-time-my-perspective.441599/

I head out and omg, this place is infested with people like cockroaches, everyone stinks etc etc.

Not just one or two....EVERYONE. No wonder you lot have to stay at home and watch indian soaps as much as possible and then mentally masturbate about all kinds of dreams of GREATER BD. :lol:

Must be something in the water, especially when it floods. Must be something brown and smelly :rofl:
 
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BD will be strongest in Asia.. BD stronk..!!!! @Nilgiri
Look who's talking:



BBS STRONK

BD STRONK

No one cares about BD enough to check on BBS fake statistics, just like no one cares about removing BD from LDC status.

After all:

https://defence.pk/threads/why-bangladesh-sucks-and-will-suck-for-a-long-time-my-perspective.441599/

I head out and omg, this place is infested with people like cockroaches, everyone stinks etc etc.

Not just one or two....EVERYONE. No wonder you lot have to stay at home and watch indian soaps as much as possible and then mentally masturbate about all kinds of dreams of GREATER BD. :lol:

Must be something in the water, especially when it floods. Must be something brown and smelly :rofl:
 
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Buddhist aid workers face backlash for helping Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims
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By Joe Freeman
SITTWE/MYANMAR, 15 November 2016
Soe Aung works for an international aid agency in his hometown of Sittwe, the capital of Myanmar’s Rakhine State. It’s a good job, but he isn’t eager to discuss it in a public setting or outside his close circle of friends and family. That’s because his agency helps Rohingya Muslims.

“I stay low-profile here,” said Soe Aung*. “In conversations, in the tea shop, I don’t talk about it and I don’t argue with local people.”

Like most people in the area, he is Rakhine, one of Myanmar’s officially recognised ethnic groups who are Buddhist, which is the majority religion nationwide. Muslims in the state make up the second-largest religious group there and mostly identify as Rohingya. The Rohingya are not officially recognized as one of Myanmar’s 135 “national races”, they are subject to apartheid-like restrictions, and most are denied citizenship.

SEE: Bribes and bureaucracy – Myanmar’s chaotic citizenship system

Tensions between the two communities erupted violently in 2012 when hundreds were killed, mostly Rohingya. About 140,000 people were driven from their communities and close to 120,000 people remain in camps around Sittwe today, almost all of them Rohingya.

After the violence in 2012 came an influx of international aid agencies to deal with the humanitarian crisis, and there was a high demand for local staff. Attracted by bigger salaries and the opportunity to do interesting, challenging work, many Rakhine Buddhists applied and were hired. But their new jobs opened them up to criticism from members of their local communities, who increasingly came to resent the presence of international organisations due to the perception that they were on the “side” of the Rohingya.

That tension between international NGOs (INGOs) and some in the Rakhine community has ebbed and flowed over the years, often stoked by Buddhist nationalist monks. In 2014, Rakhine Buddhists rioted in Sittwe, damaging the offices of a German medical charity, Malteser International, as well as some UN agencies.

The situation has heated up once again over the past few weeks, as the military carries out operations in Maungdaw, a township on the frontier with Bangladesh. The government says members of the Rohingya community carried out deadly attacks on border police posts, and that the army is now hunting down a shadowy militant group.

The military refuses to allow aid groups or journalists access to Maungdaw, so it has been impossible to verify reports by human rights organisations of abuses against civilians. Human Rights Watch has released satellite photos of entire Rohingya villages burned to the ground, and the UN has called for an investigation. For its part, the government has denied that soldiers committed any atrocities and has blamed mysterious “attackers” for setting the fires.

Over the weekend, the government said its soldiers killed 25 militants, but some accounts strain credulity. For example, it said soldiers shot and killed six people who “ran towards the troops in order to attack” even though they were armed only with machetes.

Insecure
The vacuum of verifiable information from Maungdaw drives rumour and fear, both in the Rohingya community and among Rakhines, some of whom fled the Muslim-majority township and took shelter in Sittwe.

SEE: Fear stalks Myanmar’s Rakhine State in wake of deadly attacks

As a result, the Rakhine aid workers find themselves with an increasingly difficult decision. Salaries can be double what they might earn working for local groups or the government, but they risk being seen as traitors or treated as pariahs at home.

“In my community, I don’t say openly that I’m working for an INGO,” said Myo Min, who works for a well-known aid agency in Sittwe, which he did not want to identify.

Discover More



The politics of food aid in Myanmar’s Rakhine state

“That is totally taboo, that name,” said Myo Min.

As tensions rise, some Rakhine aid workers say they fear for their security when they work in Muslim-majority townships like Maungdaw.

“In the Muslim areas, when we go to those areas, sometimes, we are afraid. They could attack us, maybe like that,” said Zaw Zaw, a Rakhine aid worker who has worked in the state for years. “Now, it’s more and more like that. It’s not only me.”

Zaw Zaw said he has never faced any serious repercussions from his own community, but it is a source of friction.

“They don’t attack and they don’t make me suffer, but they talk about it,” he said, adding that he understands their position.

Conflicted
Indeed, some local aid workers even share these feelings of resentment towards international NGOs, which they see as allies of the Rohingya, Zaw Zaw said. He alluded to the widespread belief that international media fall for exaggerated stories of suffering told by the Rohingya.

“We know they are pretending,” he said.

There is a popular perception that the situation for the Rohingya is not as bad as many foreigners think. This is partly because Rohingya communities receive more aid than Rakhine communities, but that’s because almost all people in displacement camps are Rohingya. And even Rohingya in their home villages are subject to movement restrictions – which makes it hard for many to find work – as well as a lack of access to healthcare and education.

The Rakhines themselves have been marginalised by Myanmar’s ethnic Bamar majority, and the state remains the second poorest in Myanmar – factors that only worsen the distrust.

The resentment makes Sittwe a challenging posting for foreigners too, many of whom sympathise with the difficult situation their local counterparts face.

Gabrielle Aron, the director of programs for the Collaborative for Development Action, is the author of a recent report on conflict sensitivity in Rakhine that touches on the relationship between local aid workers and their communities. She found that Rakhine NGO staff came under pressure.

"Given the perception among much of the ethnic Rakhine community that most international agencies primarily support the Muslim population, working for these agencies as an ethnic Rakhine person can be seen as a betrayal, given the intercommunal tensions," said Aron. "They are in a tough position. Many staff of international agencies are genuinely dedicated to the work that they do, but they have a difficult line to walk."

*The names of Rakhine aid workers have been changed for their protection.

(TOP PHOTO: Aid agencies' office in a displacement camp for Rohingya outside Sittwe. CREDIT: Aung Naing Soe)
 
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Then accept my apology in his behalf and move on. However you should also point out your guys racism calling Myanmar guys monkeys.
BD people always want a good relationship with Burma. But, the Burmese forum members always ill mouth us and call us blacks when they themselves are a race who look very near to monkey. BD forum members are just responding to their bad mouthing at an opportune time.
 
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Look who's talking:


Great video thank You. These boys are asking every child about their school and books and receiving positive answer. Bright Future even in the slums. It seems one of them knows every child of the slum and telling the cameraman about them.

You had not idea what these kids were talking!!! you dumb.

Thanks for posting the video. Power of BD youth.

I do not see slums in Dhaka now a days. Where are large slums, i want to visit ? Can you show me on Google map?
 
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Rohingya Muslims displaced, murdered and burned in Myanmar.

Muslims in Myanmar is heartbreaking life !!!. This is the tip of the iceberg, because for years the Rohingya people, persecuted is Muslim, abused and killed.De Rohingya Muslims live in the Rakhine area. Rakhine was an independent Islamic state which is attacked by Burmese Buddhists in 1742 and annexed. After a reign of 40 years, the English settlers in this area until 1942 Rakhine is among the first Pinlong Agreement transferred by the British to the Burmese Buddhists. Since the departure of the British, the local Buddhists eradicated more than 100,000 Muslims.
 
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Myanmar thinks they have huge back up. May be forgot about NAF war .

Respect to This Major General- WAR HERO - "Alm Fazlur Rahman".

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Inside Story of NAF War between Bangladesh vs Myanmer. -

"Naf is a bordering river between Bangladesh and Myanmar. Upper Naf has about 12 branches of smaller river. In 1966, Pakistan and Burma concluded a treaty agreeing that none of the countries will train the Naf river or branches of rivers . With the natural shifting of depth of river the demarcation of boundary between the countries will shift. When I took over as DG BDR I was told that 28 hundred acres TOTAL DIP OF BANGLADESH had been grabbed by Myanmar by shifting the depth of Naf river by building dams, groans and spars on the stewaries of main Naf river taking advantage of 1966 treaty. Suddenly, Myanmar started building dam on the last branches of Naf river, if completed whole TAKNAF would go into the sea. We protested but in-vain. Myanmar didn't stop. To protect the building side Myanmar deployed two divisions Army under command two major generals one from army and another from Navy. We positioned 2500 BDR troops under DDG BDR and kept the command directly under me. In one night, I moved 25 lac different types of ammunition and bombs in Cox's Bazar. Kept half in Cox's Bazar and sent half to the war positions. On 1st January 2000 at about 2.30 pm, I gave order for firing and the offensive strick was on. It lasted for 3 days in which 600 Myanmar army soldiers were killed. The war was live broadcasted by reporters Z. I. Mamun and Supan Roy on Ekushey Television. On 4th January, Myanmar's Head of the State Senior General Than Shwe call all the diplomats in Rangoon telling them that, Myanmar wants no war with Bangladesh. Cease fire was effected and a letter came from Myanmar govt saying, "We invite a delegation from Bangladesh to discuss all outstanding matters between two countries without any preconditions". Negotiation started under joint secretary (political affairs) Janibul Haque of the Ministry of Home Affairs, who headed the Bangladesh delegation in Myanmar. During the bilateral talks, Myanmar side was so wrought-up that they didn't even provide typewriters. And the treaty was signed on hand written documents. Myanmar dismantle the dam, thus we could save Teknaf from being lost into the Bay of Bengal. We defeated Myanmar's forces completely with no loss of life from our side. This is in nutshell about NAF WAR."

Special thanks to - Alm Fazlur Rahman

Sad . Bangladeshi Police are better equipped , it seems

bangladesh-police-kill-mastermind-of-dhaka-cafe-attack.jpg

In south-Asia police are also terrorist.
 
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Look who's talking:



BBS STRONK

BD STRONK

No one cares about BD enough to check on BBS fake statistics, just like no one cares about removing BD from LDC status.

After all:

https://defence.pk/threads/why-bangladesh-sucks-and-will-suck-for-a-long-time-my-perspective.441599/

I head out and omg, this place is infested with people like cockroaches, everyone stinks etc etc.

Not just one or two....EVERYONE. No wonder you lot have to stay at home and watch indian soaps as much as possible and then mentally masturbate about all kinds of dreams of GREATER BD. :lol:

Must be something in the water, especially when it floods. Must be something brown and smelly :rofl:
at least, they have a toilet..!!..
 
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