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Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing - Updates & Discussions

12:00 AM, October 06, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:50 PM, October 06, 2017
Dealing with a Chameleon
dealing_with_a_chameleon.jpg

Photo: AFP
Shah Husain Imam
The traditions of Myanmar's hermitage, of which the Burmese military remains a purveyor, sometimes come to the fore in awkward ways.

One story exemplifies this. Shwe Eain Si (19), the Miss Grand Myanmar, lost her title because of commenting on the Rohingya issue in Rakhine State and posting it on Facebook. What she said, however, resonated with a prevailing view on the subject: “The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) is responsible for the violence in the State.” As if that was not flattering enough to the regime, she went on to add, “ARSA by recourse to a deception was trying to draw the sympathy of the international community.” It went viral, clearly not to the liking of the organisers who balked at her reference to “violence in the state” presumably ruffling the feathers of the military.

The nervous organisers preferred to err on the side of caution saying, “Since Shwe Eain didn't behave like a role model, she has to forgo the title, trophy and the award money.”

Even Suu Kyi as the de facto leader of the government, knowing how her country is riven by inherent ethnic divisiveness, shared with a Minister of State at the Foreign Office, Mark Field, the positive stories outside Rakhine State where “Flowers of democracy have begun to bloom in Burma”. If that indeed is the case, why must Rakhine be a cauldron of hell for a single ethnic minority?

The Myanmar government insists on verification of more than half a million Rohingyas, mostly Muslim refugees, to be entitled to repatriation to their ancestral home on the other side of the border. Yet, what illustrates the basic irony is that despite repeated requests by the international community, it was denied access for well over a month to the troubled state to verify allegations of mass murder and arson against the authorities. The incidence and traces of barbaric cruelty were corroborated by satellite images.

Nonetheless, the shutting out of the true picture on the ground and blocking aid to the victims have been the biggest obstacles in preventing a humanitarian disaster from snowballing as it has.

Finally, last Monday, coinciding with the ministerial level meeting between both sides in Dhaka, 20 diplomats from the west with one from Indonesia were given a conducted tour of the ravaged villages. They were appalled at the sight of the burned, scrawny habitats.

Hawks in the military like to air the view that in accordance with an old Burmese law/custom, burned lands belong to the state. One wonders what the refugees might return to!

The sequel to the meeting between the Myanmar Union Minister U Kyaw Tint Swe and the Bangladesh Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali in Dhaka last Monday and the press statement of Myanmar's State Counsellor's Office has been marked by cautious optimism in Dhaka. Both sides have agreed to have the Rohingya refugees return to Myanmar and to this end, form a joint working group to start the process of repatriation. Yet, the two countries differ on the question of involving the UNHCR in the process entailing verification, voluntary return, resettlement of the refugees in Rakhine with full dignity, restored livelihoods and security.

Bangladesh wants to associate the appropriate UN agency with the multi-faceted task but the Myanmar government is against any UN involvement. The State Counsellor's Office alluded to the MoU of April 28, 1992 which was fully bilateral without any involvement of UN bodies. This deviates from Aung San Suu Kyi's September 19 speech which had clearly mentioned that the refugees would return in line with the 1993 Rohingya Repatriation Agreement between Myanmar, Bangladesh and the UNHCR.

Given Myanmar's track record on repatriation and the undoing of it, we can be bilateral as far as the formation of a joint task force goes but not anything beyond that. In terms of the verification of refugees made complicated by lack of papers and their sequential return to their ancestral homes, UN involvement is not just desirable but also essential.
This should form part of the TOR (terms of reference) of the basic agreement itself.
Even Kofi Annan's thrust on restoration of citizenship right to the Rohingyas should evoke a positive response to guarantee a sustainable solution to the retrograde problem of religious ethnicity.

It cannot be lost on Myanmar that it was only when international pressure had stacked heavily against it that she took the initiative to engage Bangladesh. There is no going back on her part now. Those collective concerns and pressures on Myanmar to abide by the rule of law do not only remain but are likely to be bolstered by each incident of Myanmar's betrayal.

The voices that remained to be galvanised are repositioning themselves behind the cause. India at the UN Human Rights Council had wanted the repatriation of the Rohingya refugees and urged Myanmar to give citizenship in the Rakhine state for a sustainable solution to the crisis. Can China and Russia have a quarrel with that kind of a rational approach?

The terrorist card cannot be overplayed in Myanmar at the expense of tackling spill-overs into the wider region. That realisation is dawning.
Shah Husain Imam is a commentator on current affairs and former Associate Editor, The Daily Star.
Email: shahhusainimam@gmail.com

http://www.thedailystar.net/opinion...ngya-refugee-crisis-dealing-chameleon-1472071
 
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12:00 AM, October 06, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 02:50 PM, October 06, 2017
Dealing with a Chameleon
dealing_with_a_chameleon.jpg

Photo: AFP
Shah Husain Imam
The traditions of Myanmar's hermitage, of which the Burmese military remains a purveyor, sometimes come to the fore in awkward ways.

One story exemplifies this. Shwe Eain Si (19), the Miss Grand Myanmar, lost her title because of commenting on the Rohingya issue in Rakhine State and posting it on Facebook. What she said, however, resonated with a prevailing view on the subject: “The Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) is responsible for the violence in the State.” As if that was not flattering enough to the regime, she went on to add, “ARSA by recourse to a deception was trying to draw the sympathy of the international community.” It went viral, clearly not to the liking of the organisers who balked at her reference to “violence in the state” presumably ruffling the feathers of the military.

The nervous organisers preferred to err on the side of caution saying, “Since Shwe Eain didn't behave like a role model, she has to forgo the title, trophy and the award money.”

Even Suu Kyi as the de facto leader of the government, knowing how her country is riven by inherent ethnic divisiveness, shared with a Minister of State at the Foreign Office, Mark Field, the positive stories outside Rakhine State where “Flowers of democracy have begun to bloom in Burma”. If that indeed is the case, why must Rakhine be a cauldron of hell for a single ethnic minority?

The Myanmar government insists on verification of more than half a million Rohingyas, mostly Muslim refugees, to be entitled to repatriation to their ancestral home on the other side of the border. Yet, what illustrates the basic irony is that despite repeated requests by the international community, it was denied access for well over a month to the troubled state to verify allegations of mass murder and arson against the authorities. The incidence and traces of barbaric cruelty were corroborated by satellite images.

Nonetheless, the shutting out of the true picture on the ground and blocking aid to the victims have been the biggest obstacles in preventing a humanitarian disaster from snowballing as it has.

Finally, last Monday, coinciding with the ministerial level meeting between both sides in Dhaka, 20 diplomats from the west with one from Indonesia were given a conducted tour of the ravaged villages. They were appalled at the sight of the burned, scrawny habitats.

Hawks in the military like to air the view that in accordance with an old Burmese law/custom, burned lands belong to the state. One wonders what the refugees might return to!

The sequel to the meeting between the Myanmar Union Minister U Kyaw Tint Swe and the Bangladesh Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali in Dhaka last Monday and the press statement of Myanmar's State Counsellor's Office has been marked by cautious optimism in Dhaka. Both sides have agreed to have the Rohingya refugees return to Myanmar and to this end, form a joint working group to start the process of repatriation. Yet, the two countries differ on the question of involving the UNHCR in the process entailing verification, voluntary return, resettlement of the refugees in Rakhine with full dignity, restored livelihoods and security.

Bangladesh wants to associate the appropriate UN agency with the multi-faceted task but the Myanmar government is against any UN involvement. The State Counsellor's Office alluded to the MoU of April 28, 1992 which was fully bilateral without any involvement of UN bodies. This deviates from Aung San Suu Kyi's September 19 speech which had clearly mentioned that the refugees would return in line with the 1993 Rohingya Repatriation Agreement between Myanmar, Bangladesh and the UNHCR.

Given Myanmar's track record on repatriation and the undoing of it, we can be bilateral as far as the formation of a joint task force goes but not anything beyond that. In terms of the verification of refugees made complicated by lack of papers and their sequential return to their ancestral homes, UN involvement is not just desirable but also essential.
This should form part of the TOR (terms of reference) of the basic agreement itself.
Even Kofi Annan's thrust on restoration of citizenship right to the Rohingyas should evoke a positive response to guarantee a sustainable solution to the retrograde problem of religious ethnicity.

It cannot be lost on Myanmar that it was only when international pressure had stacked heavily against it that she took the initiative to engage Bangladesh. There is no going back on her part now. Those collective concerns and pressures on Myanmar to abide by the rule of law do not only remain but are likely to be bolstered by each incident of Myanmar's betrayal.

The voices that remained to be galvanised are repositioning themselves behind the cause. India at the UN Human Rights Council had wanted the repatriation of the Rohingya refugees and urged Myanmar to give citizenship in the Rakhine state for a sustainable solution to the crisis. Can China and Russia have a quarrel with that kind of a rational approach?

The terrorist card cannot be overplayed in Myanmar at the expense of tackling spill-overs into the wider region. That realisation is dawning.
Shah Husain Imam is a commentator on current affairs and former Associate Editor, The Daily Star.
Email: shahhusainimam@gmail.com

http://www.thedailystar.net/opinion...ngya-refugee-crisis-dealing-chameleon-1472071
 
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UN, diplomats find unimaginable suffering in Rakhine on visit
Agence France-Presse
Published at 06:54 PM October 03, 2017
foreign-diplomats-690x450.jpg

Diplomats prepare to board a military helicopter at Sittwe Airport in Sittwe, Rakhine State on Monday EPA
International aid groups fear tens of thousands of Rohingya who remain in northern parts of Rakhine are in urgent need of food, medicine and shelter after over a month of military operations
The scale of the suffering inside Myanmar’s Rakhine state is “unimaginable”, the United Nations said Monday, after three of its members joined a belated government-steered visit for aid agencies and diplomats to the conflict-battered region.

Myanmar has tightly controlled access to the state since last month when attacks by Rohingya militants prompted an army kickback that sent 507,000 of the Muslim minority fleeing to Bangladesh.

Scores of Rohingya villages have been torched.

A Myanmar official tally says hundreds of people died as violence consumed remote communities, including Rohingya.

Hindus and ethnic Rakhine were also among the dead – allegedly killed by Rohingya militants.

Rights groups say the real death toll is likely to be much higher, especially among the Rohingya, while the UN has labelled army operations as “ethnic cleansing” against the Muslim group.

Many inside Myanmar have accused the UN of having a pro-Rohingya bias, as hostility towards INGOs sky rockets, further limiting access.

Monday’s visit marks a thaw in the relationship, with the UN welcoming the trip as a “positive step” while reiterating “the need for greater humanitarian access”.

“The scale of the human suffering is unimaginable and the UN sends its deepest condolences to all those affected,” it said, calling for an end to the “cycle of violence”.

It also urged a “safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainable return of refugees to their area of origin”.

Diplomats and other INGOs accompanied them on the trip, which was delayed from last week. But the limitations of the one-day visit were not immediately clear.

The EU delegation to Myanmar also joined the whistle-stop trip, which took in Maungdaw and Rathedaung areas, explaining in a statement “this was not an investigation mission and could not be in the circumstances”.

“We saw villages that had been burned to the ground and emptied of inhabitants. The violence must stop,” it said, calling for unimpeded humanitarian and media access.

International aid groups fear tens of thousands of Rohingya who remain in northern parts of Rakhine are in urgent need of food, medicine and shelter after over a month of military operations.

In a sign of ongoing tensions and mistrust, a few thousand Rohingya have massed on a beach awaiting boats to Bangladesh after receiving death threats.

Myanmar had around 1.1 million Rohingya before August 25 attacks by militants from the minority group sparked a massive security crackdown.

The number has halved since then.

Rakhine has long been a cauldron of ethnic and religious tensions, but the last five years has seen communal relations plunge to their worst yet.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/s...ts-find-unimaginable-suffering-rakhine-visit/
 
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They have of course fled for no reason.
I fled Pakistan. You fled Bangla. Reason? Maybe they fled to get jobs or better economic opportunities in Bangla garment industry. Don't buy into Western Zionist propaganda. They are concerned about Chinese influence and this is their way to stop PRC building OBOR routes.
 
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So why are you quoting a American tool [UN] which has zero credibility by a Shia mouthpiece [Press TV]? Seems to me this is all Jewish/Shia conspiracy against our ally China and intended to cause "Syria" like instability near the belly of the PRC.


Wish I had your level of insight!
So Myanmar has not terrorized 500,000
Rohingyas into BD then? This is all made up?
Myanmar needs to join the civilised world or else it will not last long.
 
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London Muslims
This is very painful to read.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/…/desperate-rohingya-muslims-fi…/
It's for this reason that our team will be flying out to the Burma borders in less than 2 weeks to help as many Rohingya as possible.
safe_image.php

Desperate Rohingya Muslims filmed swimming through river in attempts to flee Burma
More Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence in Burma streamed toward the border on Thursday and Friday, despite government assurances that it was stopping the…
TELEGRAPH.CO.UK
 
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I fled Pakistan. You fled Bangla. Reason? Don't buy into Western Zionist propaganda. They are concerned about Chinese influence and this is their way to stop PRC building OBOR routes.

I have no idea what you are talking about.
Fact is half a million Rohingya have fled into
BD with accusations of mass murder and rape.
If Myanmar has nothing to hide, then why not allow the world media in?

PS - you are on my ignore list now as you are worse than Hindu turds.
 
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05:26 PM, October 06, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:37 PM, October 06, 2017
UN braces for further exodus
rohingya_afp_0.jpg

A Rohingya woman with her baby walks on the shore of the Naf river in Teknaf after crossing the border on Thursday, October 5, 2017. Photo: AFP
Reuters, Geneva/Yangon
Muslim Rohingya are still fleeing from Myanmar to Bangladesh and the United Nations is bracing for a possible "further exodus", the UN humanitarian aid chief said today.
Some 515,000 Rohingya have arrived in Bangladesh from Myanmar's western state of Rakhine in six weeks since the end of August, in what the United Nations has called the world's fastest-developing refugee emergency.

The refugee crisis began after Myanmar security forces responded to Rohingya militant attacks on August 25 by unleashing a brutal crackdown that the United Nations has denounced as ethnic cleansing.

Myanmar insists its forces must fight the "terrorists" who have killed civilians and burnt villages, and it rejects any suggestion of ethnic cleansing.

But rights groups say more than half of more than 400 Rohingya villages in the north of Rakhine State have been torched in a campaign by the security forces and Buddhist vigilantes to drive out Muslims.

Mark Lowcock, UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, reiterated an appeal for access to the population in northern Rakhine, saying the situation was "unacceptable".

Myanmar has blocked most access to the area, although some agencies have offices open in towns there and the International Committee of the Red Cross is helping the Myanmar Red Cross to deliver aid.

"This flow out of Myanmar has not stopped yet, it's into the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya (who are) still in Myanmar, we want to be ready in case there is a further exodus," Lowcock told a news briefing in Geneva.

"Half a million people do not pick up sticks and flee their country on a whim."

An estimated 2,000 Rohingya are arriving in Bangladesh every day, Joel Millman of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) told a separate briefing.

Myanmar officials have said they attempted to reassure groups trying to flee to Bangladesh but could not stop people who were not citizens from leaving.

The official Myanmar News Agency said "large numbers" of Muslims were preparing to cross the border. It cited their reasons as "livelihood difficulties", health problems and a "belief" of insecurity.

Aid agencies have warned of a malnutrition crisis with about 281,000 people in Bangladesh in urgent need of food, including 145,000 children under five and more than 50,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women.
RISK
Cholera is a risk, amid fears of disease spreading in the rain-drenched camps where aid workers are trying to install sanitation systems, a spokesman for the World Health Organisation said.

About 900,000 doses of cholera vaccines are due to arrive this weekend and a vaccination campaign should start on Tuesday.

UN-led aid bodies have appealed for $434 million over six months to help up to 1.2 million people - including 300,000 Rohingya already in Bangladesh before the latest crisis and 300,000 Bangladeshi villagers in so-called host communities.

The Rohingya are regarded as illegal immigrants in Buddhist-majority Myanmar and most are stateless.

Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has faced criticism for not doing more to stop the violence, although a military-drafted constitution gives her no power over the security forces.

She has condemned rights abuses and said Myanmar was ready to start a process agreed with Bangladesh in 1993 by which anyone verified as a refugee would be accepted back, but there is little hope for speedy repatriation.

Both the United States and Britain have warned Myanmar the crisis is putting at risk the progress it has made since the military began to loosen its grip on power.

China, which built close ties with Myanmar while it was under military rule and Western sanctions, has been supportive.

In Washington, US officials said sanctions and the withholding of aid were among the options available to press Myanmar to halt the violence but they had to be careful to avoid worsening the crisis.

"We don't want to take actions that exacerbate their suffering. There is that risk in this complicated environment," Patrick Murphy, a deputy assistant secretary of state, told a hearing of the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee.
Murphy said efforts were underway to identify those responsible for rights violations.
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...exodus-refugees-rakhine-state-myanmar-1472476
 
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It will remain a wish.
Fled for same reason as me and you. Economics. Please don't buy into Western Zionist propaganda that wants to subvert OBOR and China. The Zionists are trying to make another "Syria" here.
Why don't you blame the Mossad-RAW- 969 Buddhists trio instead, for unleashing the acts of Genocide,Ethnic cleansing,Crime against humanity and falsely accusing Iran,the UN instead?:crazy::crazy:
 
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New Delhi, Oct 6 India and the European Union today expressed "deep concern" over the Rohingya refugee crisis during their 14th summit with the two sides urging Myanmar to work with Bangladesh for their return.

After the talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Tusk, the two sides underscored the need for early return of the displaced people of all communities to northern Rakhine state in Myanmar.

Addressing a joint press event, Tusk said the two sides wanted de-escalation of tensions and full adherence to international obligations in Myanmar and access of people to humanitarian aid.

"The Rohingya people must be able to return voluntarily with safety and dignity. We call for implementation of recommendations of the (Kofi Annan-led) International Rakhine Advisory Commission to tackle the root cause of this crisis. As a neighbour India stands first in the line to respond," Tusk said.

Responding to a PIL last month, the NDA government had told the Supreme Court that Rohingya Muslims are "illegal" immigrants in the country and their continued stay had "serious national security ramifications".

Millions of Rohingya Muslims have fled the conflict-hit Rakhine state to Bangladesh and India after the escalation of tensions following a military crackdown.

The joint statement said both sides took note that the violence was triggered by a series of attacks by Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) militants which led to loss of lives amongst the security forces as well as the civilian population.

"India and the EU expressed deep concern at the recent spate of violence in the Rakhine state of Myanmar that has resulted in the outflow of a large number of people from the state, many of whom have sought shelter in neighbouring Bangladesh," the joint statement said.

When asked at a media briefing by the Ministry of External Affairs, about the comments made by Tusk on the issue, Ruchi Ghanshyam, Secretary (West) said, "The EU has talked about their expectations and the agreed position is in the joint statement."

The joint statement said India and the EU also recognised the role being played by Bangladesh in extending humanitarian assistance to the people in need.

source:https://www.outlookindia.com/newssc...-concern-over-rohingya-refugee-crisis/1162289
 
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I do. Mossad are involved in causing religious war so that WOT can be continued in East Asia. Only Jew aplogists will ignore this fact. Are you a Jew apologist Bangla Bir, are you?
Jews,Christians & Muslims,are followers of the 4 Holy books/scripts sent by the Almighty,as such,yes I personally have nothing against them.We muslin men are also allowed to get married to the females of these 2 faiths. :-):-):-). You are probably getting confused between the differences of Jews and Zionists.
kindly study a little more on "969" movement also,I hope these facts will clear all of your doubts once and for all. For your kind information,Bangladesh on the other hand is a strong advocate of the BRI/OBAR Incincitive. :smitten::smitten::smitten:
 
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