What's new

No Rohingyas In Arakan History: International Experts!

These are just random pictures

You are trying to hide the war crimes of the Burmese



Dehijab??? Shave beard????? Your a idiot


Your complaining the Malays are abusive of non muslims and at the same time supporting oppression of muslims in Myanmar by Burmese scum

You look at the early post. I do not support Myanmar nor Rohingya.

I am saying, the Panthay shave their beard and unhijab, and no one molest them.

I have been preaching good in this thread telling Burmese not to persecute rohingya.
 
.
people here are justifying what is happening in burma with muslims .shameful .Burmese junta time will come
 
.
Lux only preach good.

Myanmar government is indeed a gangster and I feel for the sufferring of Rohingya. Myanmar should stop giving shit to minority, not just rohingya but kokang, kachin...etc

If Myanmar government give peace, can Muslims stop separatism and gangsterism, and start Panthay-tisation. If this is not possible, then no peace.

FYI when Myanmar attack Kokang, Lux also give sympathy and NEVER blame China for not interfering. Lux is very non racist and support Islam.

Below is a beautiful song of Azan + Ave Maria and I hope everyone make love, not make war.

 
.
Both SL and Burma could have asked to relocate the people British empire brought like the African countries did. British empire made huge demographical changes and left but when the other countries were sorting them out, you have hundreds of "human rights activists" shouting against it. Bhutan was lucky to realise this early and solve the problem and I hope Burmese do the same.
 
.
Myanmar settled in Rakhine. Rakhine were in rebellion against the rule of Myanmar’s king from 1787 to 1815 and Rakhine people headed to the south part of Bengala for settlement.

And we have still these Rakhine people in Bangladesh.

In his talks about 'From Rakhine cross-border settlement to ethnic violence', Dr Aye Chan explained the increased cross-border settlement from 1826 to 1975, more movements of Chittagong people, who become the majority in Maungdaw and Buthedaung townships.

He said Bengali Muslim population increased from 58,255 in 1871 to 178,647 in 1911. The Bengalis had become the great majority groups in Maungdaw and Buthedaung townships representing 94% and 84% respectively of the total populations there.
"I never come across the term "Rohingya". But Muslims settlers arrived in Mrauk-U around 17th century. They did not name themselves as Rohingyas then. Other cultures also reached Mrauk-U in the century. The first Dutchman arrived in Mrauk-U in 1608. There were many Dutch offspring with Arakan mothers in 1640. Mrauk-U can be said as a colorful town," Professor Dr Stephen van Galen from Leiden University responded to a question about the term.
"I also talked about it before. A man named Mr. Abdul Gaffa from Buthedaung, Rakhine State created it in 1951. Actually he made it up from the name "Roshang" or "Rohan". It's a Bengali word meaning Rakhine people,"

They were Bengali may be. May be Rohingya name started after creation of Rakhine state in 1951. Whats with that group of people named themselves at some time of history. Burmese, Chinese, Bengali groups never existed at the start of history.

Well said, just Bangladeshi illegal immigrants as Myanmar has being saying all along.

What do the quotes say above? Do you even read before comment?

Well same thing that Sri Lanka went through and still does with Tamils from India.. Certain minorities trying to manipulate it's history.. The ignorant world ever ready to swallow sob stories of the minority downtrodden but in actual reality it's the other way around

And this coming from a person of minority himself

Its different.
indeed..!! bro... u got all situation what Myanmar faced... !! thz..

here is one more reason why we cant accept them...
==========================================

1942 Genocide of Buddhists in Maungdaw District

(Translation of An Eyewitness Account of the 1942 Bengali Riots from the MEG.)

1942 Bengali-Yakhine Riots locally known as the Kalar-Yakhine Ahdikayone in Burmese began from Sittwe the capital city of Arrakan state in Burma in early 1942.
British were withdrawing rapidly from Burma and the Indian soldiers from Rajpur Native Battalions together with the Bengali-Muslims were raping the Yakhine women and girls and killing Yakhine Men and boys all over the Sittwe town during that lawless vacuum.
Finally the Buddhist Yakhines took the law into their own hands and started killing the British Indian soldiers and the Bengali soldiers in Sittwe. The full-blown Benglai-Yakhine riots soon spread to Myaybone, Minbyar, Myauk-U, and Kyauktaw townships.

And once the British were completely gone the Bengali-Muslims had to flee the Arrakan Proper and take refuge in the Maungdaw-Butheetaung area by the border of then India and Burma. Eventually the race riots in Arakan Proper died down as the efforts by the Yakhine political leaders such as U Pyinnyar-Thiha and Bonbauk Thar Kyaw calmed the public.

The Riots Spread to the Border Region


But the fleeing Bengali-Muslims and some educated Muslim leaders from the Maungdaw-Butheetaung region began to incite the local Bengali-Muslim crowd to slaughter the local Yakhine-Buddhists.
(Translator’s note: The ethnic cleansing or the Islamic genocide of the native Buddhists was the crucial part of their long term plan to massacre the native Buddhists and make the area exclusively Muslims so that the Maungdaw-Butheetaung frontier region could eventually be re-established as the Islamic county of India's East-Bengal which become East-Pakistan and later modern Bangladesh.)
Major Kyaw Khine, the Deputy Commissioner of Akyab District, left behind by the British Colonial Government to maintain law and order in the frontier area, tried really hard together with the Bengali-Muslim leaders Yar Sein and Sultan Marmut to prevent the slaughter. But Major Kywa Khin himself was quickly shot and killed by the Bengali-Muslims at the Gutarbyin Village of Butheetauing Township.

The Beginning of Ethnic Cleansing in Maungdaw Town

Armed Bengali Family in the field.
By May 1942 the Bengali-Muslim men from all the Bengali villages in the frontier area and many more from across the border had gathered, armed with guns and swords and spears, and began their genocidal campaign against the Buddhist-Yakhine villages.
The armed Bengalis set up roadblocks, destroyed the bridges, and encircled the Yakhine villages. By then more than 20,000 armed Bengalis had surrounded the Maungdaw town. All the entry and exit points had been completely blocked and the horrifying news of surrounding Buddhist villages being burnt to the ground and their people slaughtered reached the town constantly.
The town was already sheltering hundreds and hundreds of Yakhine refugees from the nearby Buddhist villages. Many were injured or wounded by the Benglai swords on their way to Maungdaw. But now they were trapped in Maungdaw together with the Yakhine-Buddhists of the town.
At about 4 in the early morning one day a large family from the Middle Village (Ahle Ywar) tried to get out of Maungdaw to flee to Butheetaung. But they were attacked by the blocking Bengali-Muslims at the Kanyindan. The whole family was injured and they lost everything on them as they ran back into the town bloodied and bruised.

That day was the very beginning of the wholesale slaughter of the Yakhine-Buddhists in Maungdaw as the armed and blood-thristy (or rather land-thirsty) Bengali-Muslims by Bangladeshi border entered the town.

We carried only whatever we could on us and tried to leave the town like the other Buddhist families. All the streets were choking with the fearful crowd finding nowhere to go as the chasing Bengali mob were getting closer and closer.
Finally everyone ended up in the compound of the Maungdaw Buddhist Monastery already sealed by the government. There we met people fleeing from the villages on the Kanyin Gyaung (Kanyin Stream) at the north of Maungdaw.
And also the people from the Hmaw-win and Magyee-chaung and Ye-phone-byin and Pan-daw-byin villages the nearby villages at the south of Maungdaw. The whole place was filled with loud cries of children and fearful voices of adults. The crowd there that day must be over 5,000, all Yakhine-Buddhists like our family.
Attempt to Rescue the Buddhist Yakhines of Maungdaw
We then heard the news of the arrival of Section-Magistrate Aung Thar Gyaw and a handful of British Ghurkha soldiers. The Magistarte Aung Thar Gyaw was originally coming to Butheetaung Town to collect the government cash from the Treasury Chest there. Once he heard the Bengali-Muslim raids of Maunhgdaw Town he had come down to rescue the besieged Buddhist-Yakhine townsfolk.
At first his plan was to take the whole crowd of townspeople to Butheetaung with the protection of his Gurkha troops as the road to Butheetaung was now controlled by the Bengali-Muslims who would kill any non-Muslim found on the jungle road.


But while waiting and preparing the large crowd to travel a heavy rain came down for a while and soon the news of road blockages due to the landslides and flash floods on the mountain spread among us. So the good Magistrate changed his plan and tried to ferry the crowd out of harm’s way across the Naff River to Takknaff Town on the India side of the border.
By then it was 9 am next day. At about noon the Magistrate Aung Thar Gyaw and English Captain Taylor with the Ghurkha soldiers came to the monastery compound and escorted the crowd to the Maungdaw Wharf where a ferry boat from the Arrakan Flotilla was waiting.
Even after many trips across the river by the big Ferry-Boat our Buddhist crowd was too large and many of us were to be ferried across by the fleet of local sampans.

Burning of Maungdaw and the Slaughter of Buddhists

By night fall we could see rolling flames on the Maungdaw side from Taknaff Town across the wide Naff River. Later we heard the depressing news that tens of thousands of Bengali-Muslims had entered Maungdaw after the town was abandoned and burned down the whole town after taking away everything removable from the Yakhine houses including rice, cooking oil, salt, and every single piece of furniture.

The same ugly fate had also fallen on every single Buddhist Monastery and Temple of Maungdaw Town.
All the Yakhine villages, there were hundreds of them Buddhist villages, on the extremely fertile strip south of Maungdaw Town between the Naff River and Mayu Ranges were completely wiped out by the rioting Bengali Muslims within few days.
While the Yakhine villagers from the foreshore villages like Nga-khu-ya, Chan-byin, Ywat-hnyo-taung, and Tha-yet-oat villages were able to manage to escape by their sampans across the Naff River, the villages far from the river were burnt down and the whole village slaughtered by the rioting Bengali-Muslims.
Even a few Buddhists who managed to trek across the Mayu Range to the Butheetaung and Kyauktaw were hunted down and killed by the Bengali-Muslims from that area especially the Bengali village of Let-wae-tet village near the town of Butheetaung.

Ah-le-than-kyaw Village at the bottom.
Back then the large village of Ah-le-than-kyaw, now the biggest Rohingya village with a large UNHCR supply depot and their area-HQ, was the main Buddhist village with a small police station.
On that day in May 1942 twenty thousand armed-Bengali-Muslims raided the Ah-le-than-kyaw police station and brutally killed all the policemen who surrendered and then all the Yakhine men from the villages.
The blood-thirsty Bengali-Muslims then burned down the village monastery together with more than 500 Buddhist women, children, elders, young Buddhist novices, and the Buddhist monks taking refuge inside the main monastery building. All 500 odd Buddhists inside were burned alive that day by the Bengali-Muslims who want their village and their fertile land and their fishing ground for good. The same fate had fallen also on the nearby village of Tart-htone-byin.
Basically none of the hundreds of thousands of Yakhin-Buddhist living in the villages at the South of Maungdaw Town escaped the warlike wholesale slaughter. Not even a single mongrel dog escaped the slaughter let alone a human being. And all their properties and lands taken by the newcomers from the Islamic-land now called Bangladesh.


Killing of BIA Officers and Soldiers in Maungdaw
Later in June 1942 a BIA (Burmese Independence Army) unit led by Bo Yan Aung captured the town of Butheedaung and they foolishly contacted the Bengalis’ Maungdaw Township Administration in an honest attempt to quell the riots and arrest the Bengali deserters from the withdrawing British army. The BIA unit was somehow invited by the Maungdaw Bengalis to come into the town of Maungdaw.
Nobody really knew why the BIA men wrongly trusted the killer Bengalis with their own lives by going into Maungdaw and accepting their hospitality. That night in June 1942 in Maungdaw the BIA men led by two of Bo Yan Aung's young lieutenants Bo Yan Naung and Bo Myo Nyunt dropped their Japanese arms at the friendly dinner prepared for them at Kanyindan Uradu School (now the Maungdaw Highschool’s Mosque) by completely trusting their Muslim hosts.
While the BIA men were hungrily eating their dinner they were attacked and cut into pieces by the Bengalis. Both Burmese Buddhist officers and all their Buddhist soldiers were killed and their bodies burned to ashes that night.
Yakhine-Buddhist Villages Destroyed by Bengali-Muslims
Following list is the 99 Yakhine villages and their respective number of Buddhist households totally wiped out by the Bengali-Muslims and forever lost from the Maungdaw North region in May 1942.
1. Thit-poke-chaung Village (20 households).
2. Kan-byin Village (43 households).
3. Yay-phone-byin Village (50 households).
4. Pan-daw-byin Village (50 households).
5. Maung-Oo Village (30 households).
6. Khwa-zone-byin Village (45 households).
7. Pyin-byu Village (45 households).
8. Doe-dan Village (200 households).
9. Thet-ke-byin Village (50 households).
10. Wet-pike Village (60 households).
11. Kyauk-chaung Village (25 households).
12. Ponna-sart Village (60 households).
13. The-chaung-ywar-thit Village (50 households).
14. Nghan-chaung Village (50 households).
15. Dar-kyi-sar Village (40 households).
16. Kyauk-pyin-seik Village (30 households).
17. Pyin-phyu-chaung Village (50 households).
18. Yay-khart-chaung Village (50 households).
19. Ngar-sar-kyu Village (60 households)
20. Pyaung-pyit Village (40 households).
21. Pyin-shay Village (30 households).
22. Pha-yone-chaung Village (30 households).
23. Upper Sin-thay-byin Village (40 households).
24. Lower Sin-thay-byin Village (20 households).
25. The-phyu-chaung Village (40 households).
26. Pyar-thar-mae Village (15 households).
27. Taung-phet Village (unknown households).
28. Phout-kyee-daung Village (30 households).
29. Upper Baw-tu-lar Village (42 households).
30. In-tu-lar Village (50 households).
31. Inn-chaung Village (30 households).
32. In-gar-pha Village (40 households).
33. Kar-lar Village (80 households).
34. La-baw-wa Village (36 households).
35. Done-kyaw-pha Village (22 households).
36. Thet-kay-byin Village (75 households).
37. Gyate-chaing Village (40 households).
38. Kaing-su Village (24 households).
39. Tarp-chaung Village (30 households).
40. Ah-le-chaung (82 households).
41. Maung-shwe-zan Village (20 households).
42. Thar-doe-hla Village (40 households).
43. Tart-chaung-chay Village (30 households).
44. Sin-pya-kwing Village (40 households).
45. Shwe-daing Village (46 households).
46. Yay-chan-chaung Village (40 households).
47. Ngar-chan Village (23 households).
48. Ye-aung-sanya-phwe Village (40 households).
49. Upper Kyaung-na-phay Village (30 households).
50. Lower Kyaung-na-phay Village (25 households).
51. Chet-su Village (20 households).
52. Ah-yoe-gya Village (40 households).
53. Kyaw-htwee-chaung Village (30 households).
54. Upper Inn-chaung Village (48 households).
55. Lower Inn-chaung Village (26 households).
56. Shwe-phee-oo-pha Village (25 households).
57. Htauk-ka-lan Village (88 households).
58. Taung-byo-let-wae Village (16 households).
59. Taung-byo-let-yar Village (28 households).
60. Day-tan-nyar Village (22 households).
61. Kun-thee-bin Village (12 households).
62. Kyan-htaung Village (15 households).
63. Tan-chaung Village (18 households).
64. San-htun-oo Village (20 households).
65. East Kha-moung-zeik Village (35 households).
66. West Kha-moung-zeik Village (25 households).
67. Upper Thu-lu-taung Village (50 households).
68. Than-khone Village (30 households).
69. Ma-phyu-ma Village (40 households).
70. Kone-tat Village (unknown households).
71. Khin-pyo-thar Village (60 households).
72. Upper Shwe-ngin-chaung Village (40 households).
73. Nga-yant-chaung Village (50 households).
74. Thit-tone-nar Village (60 households).
75. Pan-shwe-aung-pha Village (20 households).
76. Shew-hla-khine Village (20 households).
77. Ta-man-thar Village (30 households).
78. Cha-doe-yee Village (15 households).
79. Thar-aung Village (30 households).
80. Loung-part Village (30 households).
81. Wet-kyane Village (100 households).
82. Kyet-kyane Village (40 households).
83. Upper Kywe-tha-bout Village (45 households).
84. Lower Kywe-tha-bout Village (60 households).
85. Kyauk-tan Village (50 households).
86. Seint-taw-byin Village (40 households).
87. Upper Gaw-du-ya Village (25 households).
88. Lower Gaw-du-ya Village (65 households).
89. Kyun-bouk Village (35 households).
90. Ta-yein Village (150 households).
91. Tin-thar-ya Village (25 households).
92. Thae-chaung Village (65 households).
93. Nghet-pyaw-chaung Village (45 households).
94. Ngar-san-baw Village (80 households).
95. Let-phwe-kya Village (20 households).
96. Kyout-chaung Village (50 households).
97. Ye-aung-chaung Village (70 households).
98. Yay-nout-ngar-thar Village (20 households).
99. Mee-gyaung-chaung Village (15 households).
The 99 Yakhine-Buddhist villages listed above were the lost villages with known household numbers in 1942. Following list is another 115 Yakhine-Buddhist villages without known household numbers also brutally wiped out by the invading Bengali Muslims in that 1942 Islamic genocide.
1. Lower Baw-du-lar Village.
2. Daing-paing Village.
3. Khaing-oo-pha Village.
4. New Thar-aw-aung Village.
5. Tat-chaung-chay-tee-zar Village.
6. Mee-min-thar-pha Village.
7. Shwe-daing Village.
8. Toung-boke Village.
9. La-mone-kaing Village.
10. Wai-lar-goung-done Village.
11. Tha-lu-chaung Village.
12. Ye-baw-oo Village.
13. The-ni Village.
14. Kyaung-khow Village.
15. Nga-yan-chaung Village.
16. Mee-chaung-khote Village.
17. Thit-tone-nar Village.
18. Mhaing-sri Village.
19. Be-yote Village.
20. Kyout-pyin-hla Village.
21. Maung-seik Village.
22. Phet-wun-chaung Village.
23. Gar-yar-byin Village.
24. Wet-kyane-chay Village.
25. San-gar-bin Village.
26. Nga-phyu-chaung Village.
27. Nat-kyauk Village.
28. Pyaing-chauing Village.
29. Kyin-phaw village.
30. Aung-hla-phyu Village.
31. Thin-baw-hla Village.
32. Mee-daik Village.
33. Nant-thar-daung Village.
34. Gaw-du-ra-the-chaung Village.
35. Sin-oh Village.
36. Kyauk-chaung-chay Village.
37. Gant-daran Village.
38. Lower Gyit-chaung Village.
39. Thit-thee-bin-ahle-byin Village.
40. Laung-done-zedi-byin Village.
41. Han-zar-ma Village.
42. Ngar-khu-ya-chaung-wa Village.
43. Kyar-khaung-htaung Village.
44. Maung-lone-pha Village.
45. Kyet-yoe-byin Village.
46. Ngan-chaung Village.
47. Big Pwint-phyu-chaung Village.
48. Small Pwint-phyu-chaung Village.
49. Chit-san-pha Village.
50. New Nay-pu-khan Village.
51. Old Nay-pu-khan Village.
52. The-chaung sisters Village.
53. Chaung-myouk Village.
54. Tha-lu-chaung Village.
55. Ywar-thit-kay Village.
56. Min-ga-la-gyee Village.
57. Kyouk-hlay-gar Village.
58. Sat-cha-gone Village.
59. The-phyu-gyun Village.
60. Min-kyo-chaung Village.
61. Yee-phone-pyin Village.
62. Khwa-sone-pyin Village.
63. Thit-pote-chaung Village.
64. Kin-chaung Village.
65. Inner Kin-chaung Village.
66. Kan-byin Village.
67. Kyee-gan-phyu Village.
68. Hmaw-win Village.
69. Gyin-chaung Village.
70. Lin-bar-kone Village.
71. Zaw-ma-tat Village.
72. South Ngar-khu-ya Village.
73. Chee-sar Village.
74. Ah-pout-wa Village.
75. Lar-lee Village.
76. Sein-pan Village.
77. Upper Tone-chaung Village.
78. Lower Tone-chaung Village.
79. Kar-dee Village.
80. Ohn-bin-yin Village.
81. Doe-dan Village.
82. Ka-nyin-dan Village.
83. Old Ah-le-than-gyaw Village.
84. Kyan-chaung Village.
85. Thin-ga-net Village.
86. Kyaung-daung Village.
87. Tat-htoe-byin Village.
88. Myin-lut-chaung Village.
89. Myee-chaung Village.
90. Shout-kaing Village.
91. Kyouk-pan-du Village.
92. Baw-dee-kaing Village.
93. Shwe-maung Village.
94. Ah-twin-byin Village.
95. Kyan-dan-chaung Village.
96. Inn-din-gyee Village.
97. Inn-din-chay Village.
98. Tha-win-chaung Village.
99. Kow-dan-kout Village.
100. Thane-khar-lee Village.
101. Done-pike Village.
102. Sin-wut Village.
103. Aung-hla-pha Village.
104. Phout-kyi-chaung Village.
105. Pauk-taw-byin Village.
106. Kone-dan Village.
107. Pa-din Village.
108. Yay-dwin-gyun Village.
109. Cha-yar-dan Village.
110. War-cha Village.
111. Upper Nyaung-bin-gyee Village.
112. Lower Nyaung-bin-gyee Village.
113. Douk Village.
114. Hla-poe-khaung Village.
All together at least 114 Yakhine-Buddhist villages with no exact family counts have been completely wiped out by the Bengali-Muslim kalars.
So if we Burmese still trust and sympathize them Muslim kalars and buy from Muslim shops and use Muslim goods we will soon be in a situation worse than those Yakhin-Buddhist villages destroyed in 1942.
Because in that 1942 Islamic Genocide we lost only Yakhine villages and some fertile remote land but we still have our race, religion, and faith intact as a nation.
But now these illegal Bengali Muslims the descendants of those Muslim killers of 1942 are reinventing themselves as so-called ethnic Rohingyas and trying to gain our citizenship so that they and their brothers millions of Bengali-Muslims from Bangladesh can eventually seep into the proper Burma and swallow us Burmese-Buddhists whole to the extinction.
If our authorities do not take that Bengali-Muslim threat seriously the future existence of our Burma as a Buddhist Burmese nation will eventually be dangerously threatened.


Present days' Buddhist-Muslim race riots originated from that 1942 genocide in Maungdaw
and thus the Buddhist-Yakhines and Muslim-Bengalis (so-called Rohingyas) will
never ever be able to live together peacefully again.



thz bro.. :cheers:



Bangladesh has an estimated 2015 population of 160.4 million, up from the 2013 estimate of 156.5 million. This makes Bangladesh the 8th most populous country in the world.

4 millions in 2 years is lowest in S Asia... ? :no:

Dont just be fcking blind idiot in the name of ultra nationalism. Try to be neutral sometimes and care for humanity. We dont have much love for ultra Islamic people. Do you see how much oppression are the Jamat e Islami people? whom are in cold Jihad in BD. Ronhingyas were Bengali may be. But now they are more close to Arab. They write in Arabic and talk in different dialect. We dont have anything in common. And the pic you just posted is from 1971 war of Bangladesh. Here goes your credibility.

Google

every people may have been seen this pic...

View attachment 226600

But i think these pic wont be a popular one in media like above one..
anther face of so-called Rohingya...

View attachment 226602

View attachment 226603

View attachment 226606

View attachment 226607



which part..? bro

Here is how the violence was staged by Burmese.



Both SL and Burma could have asked to relocate the people British empire brought like the African countries did. British empire made huge demographical changes and left but when the other countries were sorting them out, you have hundreds of "human rights activists" shouting against it. Bhutan was lucky to realise this early and solve the problem and I hope Burmese do the same.

British didnt bring them only.
 
Last edited:
.
And we have still these Rakhine people in Bangladesh.





They were Bengali may be. May be Rohingya name started after creation of Rakhine state in 1951. Whats with that group of people named themselves at some time of history. Burmese, Chinese, Bengali groups never existed at the start of history.



What do the quotes say above? Do you even read before comment?



Its different.


Dont just be fcking blind idiot in the name of ultra nationalism. Try to be neutra sometimes and care for humanity. We dont have much love for ultra Islamic people. Do you see how much oppression are the Jamat e Islami people? whom are in cold Jihad in BD. Ronhingyas were Bengali may be. But now they are more close to Arab. They write in Arab and talk in different dialect. We dont have anything in common now. And the pic you just posted is from 1971 war of Bangladesh. Here goes your credibility.

Google



Here is how the violence was staged by Burmese.





British didnt bring them only.
That's what the Tamils say too. They say that they were in SL before any other ethnic group. I can understand what the Burmese are going through and minorities receive special attention from media and the plight majority is often ignored.
 
.
That's what the Tamils say too. They say that they were in SL before any other ethnic group. I can understand what the Burmese are going through and minorities receive special attention from media and the plight majority is often ignored.

Do you see above the Muslim people migrated during Marak u of Arakan. Not by the British. Burmese people also migrated there by expelling the Rakhine people.
 
.
indeed..!! bro... u got all situation what Myanmar faced... !! thz..

here is one more reason why we cant accept them...
==========================================

1942 Genocide of Buddhists in Maungdaw District

(Translation of An Eyewitness Account of the 1942 Bengali Riots from the MEG.)

1942 Bengali-Yakhine Riots locally known as the Kalar-Yakhine Ahdikayone in Burmese began from Sittwe the capital city of Arrakan state in Burma in early 1942.
British were withdrawing rapidly from Burma and the Indian soldiers from Rajpur Native Battalions together with the Bengali-Muslims were raping the Yakhine women and girls and killing Yakhine Men and boys all over the Sittwe town during that lawless vacuum.
Finally the Buddhist Yakhines took the law into their own hands and started killing the British Indian soldiers and the Bengali soldiers in Sittwe. The full-blown Benglai-Yakhine riots soon spread to Myaybone, Minbyar, Myauk-U, and Kyauktaw townships.

And once the British were completely gone the Bengali-Muslims had to flee the Arrakan Proper and take refuge in the Maungdaw-Butheetaung area by the border of then India and Burma. Eventually the race riots in Arakan Proper died down as the efforts by the Yakhine political leaders such as U Pyinnyar-Thiha and Bonbauk Thar Kyaw calmed the public.

The Riots Spread to the Border Region


But the fleeing Bengali-Muslims and some educated Muslim leaders from the Maungdaw-Butheetaung region began to incite the local Bengali-Muslim crowd to slaughter the local Yakhine-Buddhists.
(Translator’s note: The ethnic cleansing or the Islamic genocide of the native Buddhists was the crucial part of their long term plan to massacre the native Buddhists and make the area exclusively Muslims so that the Maungdaw-Butheetaung frontier region could eventually be re-established as the Islamic county of India's East-Bengal which become East-Pakistan and later modern Bangladesh.)
Major Kyaw Khine, the Deputy Commissioner of Akyab District, left behind by the British Colonial Government to maintain law and order in the frontier area, tried really hard together with the Bengali-Muslim leaders Yar Sein and Sultan Marmut to prevent the slaughter. But Major Kywa Khin himself was quickly shot and killed by the Bengali-Muslims at the Gutarbyin Village of Butheetauing Township.

The Beginning of Ethnic Cleansing in Maungdaw Town

Armed Bengali Family in the field.
By May 1942 the Bengali-Muslim men from all the Bengali villages in the frontier area and many more from across the border had gathered, armed with guns and swords and spears, and began their genocidal campaign against the Buddhist-Yakhine villages.
The armed Bengalis set up roadblocks, destroyed the bridges, and encircled the Yakhine villages. By then more than 20,000 armed Bengalis had surrounded the Maungdaw town. All the entry and exit points had been completely blocked and the horrifying news of surrounding Buddhist villages being burnt to the ground and their people slaughtered reached the town constantly.
The town was already sheltering hundreds and hundreds of Yakhine refugees from the nearby Buddhist villages. Many were injured or wounded by the Benglai swords on their way to Maungdaw. But now they were trapped in Maungdaw together with the Yakhine-Buddhists of the town.
At about 4 in the early morning one day a large family from the Middle Village (Ahle Ywar) tried to get out of Maungdaw to flee to Butheetaung. But they were attacked by the blocking Bengali-Muslims at the Kanyindan. The whole family was injured and they lost everything on them as they ran back into the town bloodied and bruised.

That day was the very beginning of the wholesale slaughter of the Yakhine-Buddhists in Maungdaw as the armed and blood-thristy (or rather land-thirsty) Bengali-Muslims by Bangladeshi border entered the town.

We carried only whatever we could on us and tried to leave the town like the other Buddhist families. All the streets were choking with the fearful crowd finding nowhere to go as the chasing Bengali mob were getting closer and closer.
Finally everyone ended up in the compound of the Maungdaw Buddhist Monastery already sealed by the government. There we met people fleeing from the villages on the Kanyin Gyaung (Kanyin Stream) at the north of Maungdaw.
And also the people from the Hmaw-win and Magyee-chaung and Ye-phone-byin and Pan-daw-byin villages the nearby villages at the south of Maungdaw. The whole place was filled with loud cries of children and fearful voices of adults. The crowd there that day must be over 5,000, all Yakhine-Buddhists like our family.
Attempt to Rescue the Buddhist Yakhines of Maungdaw
We then heard the news of the arrival of Section-Magistrate Aung Thar Gyaw and a handful of British Ghurkha soldiers. The Magistarte Aung Thar Gyaw was originally coming to Butheetaung Town to collect the government cash from the Treasury Chest there. Once he heard the Bengali-Muslim raids of Maunhgdaw Town he had come down to rescue the besieged Buddhist-Yakhine townsfolk.
At first his plan was to take the whole crowd of townspeople to Butheetaung with the protection of his Gurkha troops as the road to Butheetaung was now controlled by the Bengali-Muslims who would kill any non-Muslim found on the jungle road.


But while waiting and preparing the large crowd to travel a heavy rain came down for a while and soon the news of road blockages due to the landslides and flash floods on the mountain spread among us. So the good Magistrate changed his plan and tried to ferry the crowd out of harm’s way across the Naff River to Takknaff Town on the India side of the border.
By then it was 9 am next day. At about noon the Magistrate Aung Thar Gyaw and English Captain Taylor with the Ghurkha soldiers came to the monastery compound and escorted the crowd to the Maungdaw Wharf where a ferry boat from the Arrakan Flotilla was waiting.
Even after many trips across the river by the big Ferry-Boat our Buddhist crowd was too large and many of us were to be ferried across by the fleet of local sampans.

Burning of Maungdaw and the Slaughter of Buddhists

By night fall we could see rolling flames on the Maungdaw side from Taknaff Town across the wide Naff River. Later we heard the depressing news that tens of thousands of Bengali-Muslims had entered Maungdaw after the town was abandoned and burned down the whole town after taking away everything removable from the Yakhine houses including rice, cooking oil, salt, and every single piece of furniture.

The same ugly fate had also fallen on every single Buddhist Monastery and Temple of Maungdaw Town.
All the Yakhine villages, there were hundreds of them Buddhist villages, on the extremely fertile strip south of Maungdaw Town between the Naff River and Mayu Ranges were completely wiped out by the rioting Bengali Muslims within few days.
While the Yakhine villagers from the foreshore villages like Nga-khu-ya, Chan-byin, Ywat-hnyo-taung, and Tha-yet-oat villages were able to manage to escape by their sampans across the Naff River, the villages far from the river were burnt down and the whole village slaughtered by the rioting Bengali-Muslims.
Even a few Buddhists who managed to trek across the Mayu Range to the Butheetaung and Kyauktaw were hunted down and killed by the Bengali-Muslims from that area especially the Bengali village of Let-wae-tet village near the town of Butheetaung.

Ah-le-than-kyaw Village at the bottom.
Back then the large village of Ah-le-than-kyaw, now the biggest Rohingya village with a large UNHCR supply depot and their area-HQ, was the main Buddhist village with a small police station.
On that day in May 1942 twenty thousand armed-Bengali-Muslims raided the Ah-le-than-kyaw police station and brutally killed all the policemen who surrendered and then all the Yakhine men from the villages.
The blood-thirsty Bengali-Muslims then burned down the village monastery together with more than 500 Buddhist women, children, elders, young Buddhist novices, and the Buddhist monks taking refuge inside the main monastery building. All 500 odd Buddhists inside were burned alive that day by the Bengali-Muslims who want their village and their fertile land and their fishing ground for good. The same fate had fallen also on the nearby village of Tart-htone-byin.
Basically none of the hundreds of thousands of Yakhin-Buddhist living in the villages at the South of Maungdaw Town escaped the warlike wholesale slaughter. Not even a single mongrel dog escaped the slaughter let alone a human being. And all their properties and lands taken by the newcomers from the Islamic-land now called Bangladesh.


Killing of BIA Officers and Soldiers in Maungdaw
Later in June 1942 a BIA (Burmese Independence Army) unit led by Bo Yan Aung captured the town of Butheedaung and they foolishly contacted the Bengalis’ Maungdaw Township Administration in an honest attempt to quell the riots and arrest the Bengali deserters from the withdrawing British army. The BIA unit was somehow invited by the Maungdaw Bengalis to come into the town of Maungdaw.
Nobody really knew why the BIA men wrongly trusted the killer Bengalis with their own lives by going into Maungdaw and accepting their hospitality. That night in June 1942 in Maungdaw the BIA men led by two of Bo Yan Aung's young lieutenants Bo Yan Naung and Bo Myo Nyunt dropped their Japanese arms at the friendly dinner prepared for them at Kanyindan Uradu School (now the Maungdaw Highschool’s Mosque) by completely trusting their Muslim hosts.
While the BIA men were hungrily eating their dinner they were attacked and cut into pieces by the Bengalis. Both Burmese Buddhist officers and all their Buddhist soldiers were killed and their bodies burned to ashes that night.
Yakhine-Buddhist Villages Destroyed by Bengali-Muslims
Following list is the 99 Yakhine villages and their respective number of Buddhist households totally wiped out by the Bengali-Muslims and forever lost from the Maungdaw North region in May 1942.
1. Thit-poke-chaung Village (20 households).
2. Kan-byin Village (43 households).
3. Yay-phone-byin Village (50 households).
4. Pan-daw-byin Village (50 households).
5. Maung-Oo Village (30 households).
6. Khwa-zone-byin Village (45 households).
7. Pyin-byu Village (45 households).
8. Doe-dan Village (200 households).
9. Thet-ke-byin Village (50 households).
10. Wet-pike Village (60 households).
11. Kyauk-chaung Village (25 households).
12. Ponna-sart Village (60 households).
13. The-chaung-ywar-thit Village (50 households).
14. Nghan-chaung Village (50 households).
15. Dar-kyi-sar Village (40 households).
16. Kyauk-pyin-seik Village (30 households).
17. Pyin-phyu-chaung Village (50 households).
18. Yay-khart-chaung Village (50 households).
19. Ngar-sar-kyu Village (60 households)
20. Pyaung-pyit Village (40 households).
21. Pyin-shay Village (30 households).
22. Pha-yone-chaung Village (30 households).
23. Upper Sin-thay-byin Village (40 households).
24. Lower Sin-thay-byin Village (20 households).
25. The-phyu-chaung Village (40 households).
26. Pyar-thar-mae Village (15 households).
27. Taung-phet Village (unknown households).
28. Phout-kyee-daung Village (30 households).
29. Upper Baw-tu-lar Village (42 households).
30. In-tu-lar Village (50 households).
31. Inn-chaung Village (30 households).
32. In-gar-pha Village (40 households).
33. Kar-lar Village (80 households).
34. La-baw-wa Village (36 households).
35. Done-kyaw-pha Village (22 households).
36. Thet-kay-byin Village (75 households).
37. Gyate-chaing Village (40 households).
38. Kaing-su Village (24 households).
39. Tarp-chaung Village (30 households).
40. Ah-le-chaung (82 households).
41. Maung-shwe-zan Village (20 households).
42. Thar-doe-hla Village (40 households).
43. Tart-chaung-chay Village (30 households).
44. Sin-pya-kwing Village (40 households).
45. Shwe-daing Village (46 households).
46. Yay-chan-chaung Village (40 households).
47. Ngar-chan Village (23 households).
48. Ye-aung-sanya-phwe Village (40 households).
49. Upper Kyaung-na-phay Village (30 households).
50. Lower Kyaung-na-phay Village (25 households).
51. Chet-su Village (20 households).
52. Ah-yoe-gya Village (40 households).
53. Kyaw-htwee-chaung Village (30 households).
54. Upper Inn-chaung Village (48 households).
55. Lower Inn-chaung Village (26 households).
56. Shwe-phee-oo-pha Village (25 households).
57. Htauk-ka-lan Village (88 households).
58. Taung-byo-let-wae Village (16 households).
59. Taung-byo-let-yar Village (28 households).
60. Day-tan-nyar Village (22 households).
61. Kun-thee-bin Village (12 households).
62. Kyan-htaung Village (15 households).
63. Tan-chaung Village (18 households).
64. San-htun-oo Village (20 households).
65. East Kha-moung-zeik Village (35 households).
66. West Kha-moung-zeik Village (25 households).
67. Upper Thu-lu-taung Village (50 households).
68. Than-khone Village (30 households).
69. Ma-phyu-ma Village (40 households).
70. Kone-tat Village (unknown households).
71. Khin-pyo-thar Village (60 households).
72. Upper Shwe-ngin-chaung Village (40 households).
73. Nga-yant-chaung Village (50 households).
74. Thit-tone-nar Village (60 households).
75. Pan-shwe-aung-pha Village (20 households).
76. Shew-hla-khine Village (20 households).
77. Ta-man-thar Village (30 households).
78. Cha-doe-yee Village (15 households).
79. Thar-aung Village (30 households).
80. Loung-part Village (30 households).
81. Wet-kyane Village (100 households).
82. Kyet-kyane Village (40 households).
83. Upper Kywe-tha-bout Village (45 households).
84. Lower Kywe-tha-bout Village (60 households).
85. Kyauk-tan Village (50 households).
86. Seint-taw-byin Village (40 households).
87. Upper Gaw-du-ya Village (25 households).
88. Lower Gaw-du-ya Village (65 households).
89. Kyun-bouk Village (35 households).
90. Ta-yein Village (150 households).
91. Tin-thar-ya Village (25 households).
92. Thae-chaung Village (65 households).
93. Nghet-pyaw-chaung Village (45 households).
94. Ngar-san-baw Village (80 households).
95. Let-phwe-kya Village (20 households).
96. Kyout-chaung Village (50 households).
97. Ye-aung-chaung Village (70 households).
98. Yay-nout-ngar-thar Village (20 households).
99. Mee-gyaung-chaung Village (15 households).
The 99 Yakhine-Buddhist villages listed above were the lost villages with known household numbers in 1942. Following list is another 115 Yakhine-Buddhist villages without known household numbers also brutally wiped out by the invading Bengali Muslims in that 1942 Islamic genocide.
1. Lower Baw-du-lar Village.
2. Daing-paing Village.
3. Khaing-oo-pha Village.
4. New Thar-aw-aung Village.
5. Tat-chaung-chay-tee-zar Village.
6. Mee-min-thar-pha Village.
7. Shwe-daing Village.
8. Toung-boke Village.
9. La-mone-kaing Village.
10. Wai-lar-goung-done Village.
11. Tha-lu-chaung Village.
12. Ye-baw-oo Village.
13. The-ni Village.
14. Kyaung-khow Village.
15. Nga-yan-chaung Village.
16. Mee-chaung-khote Village.
17. Thit-tone-nar Village.
18. Mhaing-sri Village.
19. Be-yote Village.
20. Kyout-pyin-hla Village.
21. Maung-seik Village.
22. Phet-wun-chaung Village.
23. Gar-yar-byin Village.
24. Wet-kyane-chay Village.
25. San-gar-bin Village.
26. Nga-phyu-chaung Village.
27. Nat-kyauk Village.
28. Pyaing-chauing Village.
29. Kyin-phaw village.
30. Aung-hla-phyu Village.
31. Thin-baw-hla Village.
32. Mee-daik Village.
33. Nant-thar-daung Village.
34. Gaw-du-ra-the-chaung Village.
35. Sin-oh Village.
36. Kyauk-chaung-chay Village.
37. Gant-daran Village.
38. Lower Gyit-chaung Village.
39. Thit-thee-bin-ahle-byin Village.
40. Laung-done-zedi-byin Village.
41. Han-zar-ma Village.
42. Ngar-khu-ya-chaung-wa Village.
43. Kyar-khaung-htaung Village.
44. Maung-lone-pha Village.
45. Kyet-yoe-byin Village.
46. Ngan-chaung Village.
47. Big Pwint-phyu-chaung Village.
48. Small Pwint-phyu-chaung Village.
49. Chit-san-pha Village.
50. New Nay-pu-khan Village.
51. Old Nay-pu-khan Village.
52. The-chaung sisters Village.
53. Chaung-myouk Village.
54. Tha-lu-chaung Village.
55. Ywar-thit-kay Village.
56. Min-ga-la-gyee Village.
57. Kyouk-hlay-gar Village.
58. Sat-cha-gone Village.
59. The-phyu-gyun Village.
60. Min-kyo-chaung Village.
61. Yee-phone-pyin Village.
62. Khwa-sone-pyin Village.
63. Thit-pote-chaung Village.
64. Kin-chaung Village.
65. Inner Kin-chaung Village.
66. Kan-byin Village.
67. Kyee-gan-phyu Village.
68. Hmaw-win Village.
69. Gyin-chaung Village.
70. Lin-bar-kone Village.
71. Zaw-ma-tat Village.
72. South Ngar-khu-ya Village.
73. Chee-sar Village.
74. Ah-pout-wa Village.
75. Lar-lee Village.
76. Sein-pan Village.
77. Upper Tone-chaung Village.
78. Lower Tone-chaung Village.
79. Kar-dee Village.
80. Ohn-bin-yin Village.
81. Doe-dan Village.
82. Ka-nyin-dan Village.
83. Old Ah-le-than-gyaw Village.
84. Kyan-chaung Village.
85. Thin-ga-net Village.
86. Kyaung-daung Village.
87. Tat-htoe-byin Village.
88. Myin-lut-chaung Village.
89. Myee-chaung Village.
90. Shout-kaing Village.
91. Kyouk-pan-du Village.
92. Baw-dee-kaing Village.
93. Shwe-maung Village.
94. Ah-twin-byin Village.
95. Kyan-dan-chaung Village.
96. Inn-din-gyee Village.
97. Inn-din-chay Village.
98. Tha-win-chaung Village.
99. Kow-dan-kout Village.
100. Thane-khar-lee Village.
101. Done-pike Village.
102. Sin-wut Village.
103. Aung-hla-pha Village.
104. Phout-kyi-chaung Village.
105. Pauk-taw-byin Village.
106. Kone-dan Village.
107. Pa-din Village.
108. Yay-dwin-gyun Village.
109. Cha-yar-dan Village.
110. War-cha Village.
111. Upper Nyaung-bin-gyee Village.
112. Lower Nyaung-bin-gyee Village.
113. Douk Village.
114. Hla-poe-khaung Village.
All together at least 114 Yakhine-Buddhist villages with no exact family counts have been completely wiped out by the Bengali-Muslim kalars.
So if we Burmese still trust and sympathize them Muslim kalars and buy from Muslim shops and use Muslim goods we will soon be in a situation worse than those Yakhin-Buddhist villages destroyed in 1942.
Because in that 1942 Islamic Genocide we lost only Yakhine villages and some fertile remote land but we still have our race, religion, and faith intact as a nation.
But now these illegal Bengali Muslims the descendants of those Muslim killers of 1942 are reinventing themselves as so-called ethnic Rohingyas and trying to gain our citizenship so that they and their brothers millions of Bengali-Muslims from Bangladesh can eventually seep into the proper Burma and swallow us Burmese-Buddhists whole to the extinction.
If our authorities do not take that Bengali-Muslim threat seriously the future existence of our Burma as a Buddhist Burmese nation will eventually be dangerously threatened.


Present days' Buddhist-Muslim race riots originated from that 1942 genocide in Maungdaw
and thus the Buddhist-Yakhines and Muslim-Bengalis (so-called Rohingyas) will
never ever be able to live together peacefully again.



thz bro.. :cheers:



Bangladesh has an estimated 2015 population of 160.4 million, up from the 2013 estimate of 156.5 million. This makes Bangladesh the 8th most populous country in the world.

4 millions in 2 years is lowest in S Asia... ? :no:

Thanks for sharing. I had no idea.
 
.
how can a stateless rohingya own lands?

that's clear... bro.. if someone who called rohingya themselves own land.. there may be just 1 things..

Most of that kind of people come from CHT , Bangladesh which is nearest area with Myanmar Border..not from Myanmar.. Why..? So-called Rohingya dont need to either buy or sell in Myanmar.. Coz part of them live in UNHCR Camps and other live in free space of Arakan by founding villages with fund of Myanmar Gov and NGOs. No need to buy to live..

2013-08-21-rohingya-590.jpg

the one who shouting to the world " we are facing the worst condition " live in such camps.. better condition than UNHCR camps in middle east.. even some of rakhine cant live like that..

And the fact "for selling to other and fled to Malaysia".. hey bro.. tell me.. who buy that kind of Area which even owner himself fled to aboard..? Rakhine will not also buy coz they're now minority in these area and enough space to live by founding villages..hence there is one thing.. he sold his land in CHT and go to Malaysia due to poverty.. BD is one of most populated countries in the world.. :D

Here is how the violence was staged by Burmese.

:D didn't see due to slow connection...
but we can also upload to more video than u.. dude.. but it will not lead to answer... Now do u have any proof that Rohingya live in arakan state since thousand years ago as u BD guys said..? if u have , prove with a book or trusted site written by Historian.. ok..?
 
Last edited:
. .
that's clear... bro.. if someone who called rohingya themselves own land.. there may be just 1 things..

Most of that kind of people come from CHT , Bangladesh which is nearest area with Myanmar Border..not from Myanmar.. Why..? So-called Rohingya dont need to either buy or sell in Myanmar.. Coz part of them live in UNHCR Camps and other live in free space of Arakan by founding villages with fund of Myanmar Gov and NGOs. No need to buy to live..

View attachment 226765
the one who shouting to the world " we are facing the worst condition " live in such camps.. better condition than UNHCR camps in middle east.. even some of rakhine cant live like that..

And the fact "for selling to other and fled to Malaysia".. hey bro.. tell me.. who buy that kind of Area which even owner himself fled to aboard..? Rakhine will not also buy coz they're now minority in these area and enough space to live by founding villages..hence there is one thing.. he sold his land in CHT and go to Malaysia due to poverty.. BD is one of most populated countries in the world.. :D



:D didn't see due to slow connection...
but we can also upload to more video than u.. dude.. but it will not lead to answer... Now do u have any proof that Rohingya live in arakan state since thousand years ago as u BD guys said..? if u have , prove with a book or trusted site written by Historian.. ok..?


People name themselves at some time of history. Even some 60-70 years ago Bengali hindus didnt use to consider Bengali Muslims as Bengalis. They used to call us Muhammaden or Muslim or Arab only. Even today many hindus consider themselves Bengalis only. So wtf wrong with Myanmar? Why they dont want to give Muslim people citizenship who migrated before 1947. Whatever they call themselves. But they migrated during Marak U. Only @asad71 called those people migrated thousands of years ago. May be he has some source. Or @extra terrestrial can help in this.

But aung zaya you are going bersark with your propaganda and lies.
 
. .
Panthay come out and say that they are not ill treated over and over again. So Barmese Buddhist is not directed against Muslims but certain bad element of Muslims who adhere to Islamofascism.

Chinese Muslims are going to show Islamo how to behave, to the chagrin of Islamo who always want bad and who always rant they got discriminated.

The Bangala Muslim should soul search and behave themselves.

u-moon-chi-wei.jpg


Panthay Muslims protect their name

Although Mandalay Region has been the scene of tension between the Buddhist and Muslim communities, such as the violence in Meiktila one year ago, U Maung Maung Lay downplayed concerns that anti-Muslim prejudice affects the Panthay community.

He said the residents of the Panthay quarter on 80th Street worked hard to keep good relations with their Buddhist neighbours, and added that much of the anger ostensibly directed against Muslims was in fact aimed at ethnic Indians.

“There have always been frictions between the Indians [and the Myanmar],” he said, adding the Panthays managed to stay outside the fray.

“The new generation is proud of Panthay culture,” he said. “I call myself Panthay, but my heart is with Myanmar and the Panthays.”
 
.
So wtf wrong with Myanmar? Why they dont want to give Muslim people citizenship who migrated before 1947. Whatever they call themselves. But they migrated during Marak U.

nothing wrong..!! they're just wrong with themselves.. LOL.. that's clearly u have no idea about this case.. :D
we have been granted many people citizenship , anyone who can prove they live in Myanmar long time ago , who can obey the Myanmar Laws , who fit with our 1982 Immigrantion Act , who admit they're migrant , not original tribe... anyone..!! may be we have been grant thousand people..We also declared the whole world that we will consider to grant citizenships to anyone who fit above facts..

Unlike them mentioned above , they want to be citizenships in the name of so-called Rohingya and called to accept them as original tribe with fake history.. that's insane.. !! it lead to mission impossible..!! :D

Now our mission upon them is so clear..!! we will consider to grant who fit the above just 4 facts. the rest will be camped with the help of UNHCR.. but Myanmar is just LDC country hence we cant afford to maintain them for a long time.. finally send them to third country or original country.. that's all.. :D

Panthay come out and say that they are not ill treated over and over again. So Barmese Buddhist is not directed against Muslims but certain bad element of Muslims who adhere to Islamofascism.

Chinese Muslims are going to show Islamo how to behave, to the chagrin of Islamo who always want bad and who always rant they got discriminated.

The Bangala Muslim should soul search and behave themselves.

u-moon-chi-wei.jpg


Panthay Muslims protect their name

Although Mandalay Region has been the scene of tension between the Buddhist and Muslim communities, such as the violence in Meiktila one year ago, U Maung Maung Lay downplayed concerns that anti-Muslim prejudice affects the Panthay community.

He said the residents of the Panthay quarter on 80th Street worked hard to keep good relations with their Buddhist neighbours, and added that much of the anger ostensibly directed against Muslims was in fact aimed at ethnic Indians.

“There have always been frictions between the Indians [and the Myanmar],” he said, adding the Panthays managed to stay outside the fray.

“The new generation is proud of Panthay culture,” he said. “I call myself Panthay, but my heart is with Myanmar and the Panthays.”

LOL.. i know him..!!
yeah.. Most Panthays in Mandalay have sweet smile .. and also have great relation with other comunity unlike other muslim.. And Panthay noodle is one of My fav food.. :D
 
.
nothing wrong..!! they're just wrong with themselves.. LOL.. that's clearly u have no idea about this case.. :D
we have been granted many people citizenship , anyone who can prove they live in Myanmar long time ago , who can obey the Myanmar Laws , who fit with our 1982 Immigrantion Act , who admit they're migrant , not original tribe... anyone..!! may be we have been grant thousand people..We also declared the whole world that we will consider to grant citizenships to anyone who fit above facts..

Unlike them mentioned above , they want to be citizenships in the name of so-called Rohingya and called to accept them as original tribe with fake history.. that's insane.. !! it lead to mission impossible..!! :D

Now our mission upon them is so clear..!! we will consider to grant who fit the above just 4 facts. the rest will be camped with the help of UNHCR.. but Myanmar is just LDC country hence we cant afford to maintain them for a long time.. finally send them to third country or original country.. that's all.. :D



:D

Is this so simple? Chittagong is 90% muslim adjacent to northern arakan rohingya dominated area. Now suppose chittagong was part of Arakan now. As in the history Marak U ruled the place. Was it necessary for the chittagonian people to prove also they are migrant or original tribe?
 
.
Back
Top Bottom