By Kourosh Ziabari:
July
21, 2012
As the Muslims around the world cheerfully get prepared for the holy
month of Ramadan, the Rohingya Muslims of Myanmar are painfully subject to the
barbaric and appalling atrocities of the extremist Buddhists, finding their
life in a constant state of trepidation and suffering.
Branded by the United Nations as one of the most persecuted minorities
of the world, Rohingyas are a group of Muslims living in the Rakhine State,
located in west of Myanmar.
With a population of 3 million, Rakhine state is bordered by the Bay of
Bengal to the west and the majority of its residents are Theravada Buddhists
and Hindus.
The suppression of the Rohingya Muslims in the Arakan region dates back
to the World War II. On March 28, 1942, about 5,000 Rohingya Muslims were
brutally massacred by the Rakhine nationalists in the Minbya and Mrohaung
Townships.
After that, the Muslims of the region were frequently subject to
harassment by the Burmese government which has so far refused to grant them
official citizenship. According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, this
lack of full citizenship rights means that the Rohingyas should tolerate other
abuses, including restrictions on their freedom of movement, discriminatory
limitations on access to education, and arbitrary confiscation of property.
It's said that as a result of dire living conditions and discriminatory
treatment by the government, some 300,000 Rohingyas have so far immigrated to
Bangladesh and 24,000 of them also escaped to Malaysia in search of a better
life. Many of them have also fled to Thailand, but neither Bangladesh nor
Thailand has received them warmly.
Bangladesh is negotiating with the Burmese government to return the
Rohingyas and Thailand has sporadically rejected the hopeless immigrants. There
have been instances where boats of Rohingyas reaching Thailand have been towed
out to sea and allowed to sink, sparking international anger among Muslims and
non-Muslims.
Human Rights Watch says the government authorities continue to require
Rohingya Muslims to perform forced labor. According to the HRW, those who
refuse or complain are physically threatened, sometimes with death, and
children as young as seven years old have been seen on forced labor teams.
Writing for The Egyptian Gazette, University of Waterloo professor Dr.
Mohamed Elmasry has enumerated the different hardships the Rohingya Muslims
have historically undergone. He writes that they are subjected to various forms
of extortion and arbitrary taxation, land confiscation, forced eviction and
house destruction and financial restrictions on marriage. Rohingyas continue to
be used as forced laborers on roads and at military camps.
The Myanmar government's mistreatment of the Rohingyas, however, has
long been contested and protested by international organizations. For several
years, human rights activists have decried the arbitrary measures leveled
against the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar by the government and the extremist
Buddhists.
In May 2009, Elaine Pearson, the Human Rights Watch's deputy Asia
director issued a statement in protest at the deteriorating conditions of the
Rohingya Muslims, calling on the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
to press the Burmese government to end its brutal practices, "the
treatment of the Rohingya in Burma is deplorable - the Burmese government
doesn't just deny Rohingya their basic rights, it denies they are even Burmese
citizens.”
Now, the conflict has escalated in the Rakhine State again and the
Muslims are once more experiencing difficult days as the black shadow of violence
and unrest has just cast over their already trembling lives. It was on the
reports that 10 Rohingya Muslims were killed by a mob of 300 Rakhines while on
their way back from the country's former capital Rangoon.
According to a group of UK-based NGOs, 650 Rohingyas were massacred from
June 10 to 28. The United Nations estimates that between 50,000 and 90,000
Rohingyas were displaced since the eruption of violence in the Asian nation.
However, due to the absence of independent reporters and monitors in the
country, it's impossible to verify the exact number of those who have been
displaced. It's also reported that some 9,000 homes belonging to the Muslims in
the western state of Rakhine were destroyed.
On July 20, the Amnesty International called the recent attacks against
minority Rohingyas and other Muslims in Myanmar a "step back" in the
country's recent progress on human rights, citing increased violence and
unlawful arrests following a state of emergency declared six weeks ago.
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has voiced its concern
over the recent violence in the state of Rakhine and the varying reports which
have leaked out as to the number of the Muslims killed. As reported by the
TimeTurk News Agency, over 1,000 Rohingya Muslims have been murdered thus far
in the conflicts that broke out in the region.
The mainstream media in the West have been largely silent about the
massacre of Muslims in Myanmar and the ordeal that has befallen them. They have
found other interesting topics to give coverage to, and as always, bigotry
against Muslims hardly moves them.
Along with the media, the Western governments have also blatantly turned
a blind eye to the heartrending anguish and suffering of the Rohingya Muslims.
Even renowned Burmese political activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung
San Suu Kyi who has been released from house arrest and was just invited to
Norway to deliver her Nobel acceptance speech 21 years after being awarded the
prize preferred not to speak a single word about the unspeakable affliction of
her fellow citizens.
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