Tag: genocide

  • Myanmar Nationals: Singaporeans Don’t Understand The Rohingya Issue

    Myanmar Nationals: Singaporeans Don’t Understand The Rohingya Issue

    The visit by Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi has been widely covered by local media.

    A video by Channel NewsAsia on Aung San Suu Kyi inspecting the guard of honour at the Istana generated much reponse from locals and Myanmar national alike.

    Some locals pointed out that Aung San Suu Kyi was disrespectful as she did not acknowledge the state colours when she walked past them.

    walk-past-state-colours-1

    Others called on her to address the proverbial elephant in the Istana – the genocide of the Rohingya. They wanted Aung San Suu Kyi to learn from Singapore.

    can-learn-from-singapore

     

    This elicited protestations from Myanmar nationals who claim that Singaporeans do not understand the Rohingya problem.

    can-learn-from-singapore-2

    dont-understand-problems

    To convince Singaporeans, one even gave an impromptu lesson in Myanmar history.

    can-learn-from-singapore-3

    This was followed by a concerted outpouring of love for Aung San Suu Kyi.

    we-love-aung-san-suu-kyi

    So there you have it.

    Can the Rohingya genocide be resolved soon?

    Source: www.facebook.com/ChannelNewsAsia

  • ASEAN Ulama & NGO Comes Up With Action Plan For Rohingya

    ASEAN Ulama & NGO Comes Up With Action Plan For Rohingya

    THE ACTION PLAN

    ASEAN + ULAMA DAN NGO MEETING TO STOP THE MYANMAR MASSACRE

    1. Distribution of the Shah Alam Declaration Worldwide ( English and Arabic )
    – all OIC Head of State members and OIC  Special Envoy on Rohingya
    – UN Security Council members
    – UN Secretary General and UN Special Envoy on Rohingya
    – all Asean Head of State members
    – Chair of EU
    – main international Media

    ACTION : MAPIM and SHURA

    2. Food and Humanitarian Flotilla to Myanmar
    – defining the objectives ( humanitarian and advocacy )
    – determing of vessel and route ( options  from Penang or Aceh or Krabi or Phuket or India or Bangladesh)
    – solicit support from UN and OIC and EU and Asean member state
    – shipping of food, medical , basic needs
    – participation : ngo activists, international media, celebrities , nobel peace prize winners, ulama, journalist ..ect
    – Funding
    – voyage schedule
    –  public mobilization and public annoucement
    – target dates and time line.

    ACTION : MAPIM and other Ngos

    3. Inter religious Dialogue and  missions with Religous Leaders in Asean +
    – issuing a collective declaration
    – inter religous mission to advocate for peace to Myanmar
    – sending message to Dalai Lama

    ACTION :
    4. Special letter to China , India and Bangladesh
    – demand to pressure Myanmar to stop the genocide
    – demand Bangladesh to protect the rights Rohingya refugees and access to humanitarian assistance
    – send delegate to embassies

    ACTION :
    5. Memorandum to Asean Human Rights Commission
    – demand Myanmar to comply to protection of the Human Rights of minorities
    – send a delegate to Asean Secretariate in Jakarta
    – call to suspend and boycot Myanmar iin Asean if genocide persist.

    ACTION :
    6. Solidarity call to all International  Muslims and Ulama Associations to stop the Myanmar Massacre.
    – call to the International Union of Ulama to urge all ulama world wide to stand up against Myanmar genocide.
    – urge all Muslims to hold special prayers for Rohingya brothers and sisters.
    – call to contribute to humanitarian assistance to Rohingya victims of oppression by Myanmar regime.
    – call to defend the victims of injustice by the Myanmar regime on the Rohingya

    7. International Boycott Campaign on Myanmar
    – to consider an international boycott against Myanmar if genocide persist within the next 7 days.
    – to look into ways of launching an effective boycot in trade , cultural, social , diplomatic and labor.
    9. International Campaign to revoke Peace Prize from Aung San Su Kyi.
    – to send a letter to Aung San Su Kyi conveying a reminder message to her of her responsibilty as a Nobel Peace Prize Winner that she is beholden to carry the duty of protectiong human rights of the oppressed and minorities.
    – to write a petition to the Panel Board of the Nobel Peace Prize

    10. Calling International Ulama for a Fatwa on the Myanmar Rohingya Massacre :
    – to write to the Chairman of International Ulama Union
    – to call on all imam of world masaajid to conduct a special prayer on the oppression on the Rohingya .

    Action Plan Proposed by the Delegates:

    1. Talk with China to put pressure on the Myanmar government as China is influential. Propose solution to PM Najib to talk to China for negotiation.
    2. UN is paralyzed with inaction, hence the neighbouring countries should put pressure on them to take actions through ASEAN channels.
    3. Asian Rohingya Centers (think tank) published a declaration called the “Declaration of Selayang” which initiated the 2017 International Year of Solidarity for Rohingya. Its objective is also to revoke Aung San Suu Kyi’s Nobel Peace Prize award;
    a. Planning for a workshop & public hearing at town halls to hear & share the problems of the Rohingya in Malaysia
    b. Engage with the local Rohingyas to assist them through Whatsapp & Facebook & go global.
    4. Hold dialogues between Buddhists & Muslims in Myanmar.
    5. Stakeholders such as the British, Bangladesh & Myanmar Governments to hold an international conference.
    6. Use OIC as a platform by sending letters to the Myanmar Government on the genocide
    7. Freedom Flotilla for Rohingya
    8. Investigation for the crimes against humanity in Arakan

    Source: www.mapim.org

  • Aung San Suu Kyi On Official Visit To Singapore

    Aung San Suu Kyi On Official Visit To Singapore

    Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi will make an official visit to Singapore from Nov 30 to Dec 2, announced Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) on Tuesday (Nov 29).

    Ms Suu Kyi will be here at the invitation of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong who will host an official welcome ceremony and a dinner for her at the Istana on Wednesday.

    Both leaders will be guests-of-honour on Thursday at the opening ceremony of a three-month exhibition of Myanmar artefacts called “Cities and Kings: Ancient Treasures from Myanmar” at the Asian Civilisations Museum.

    Ms Suu Kyi, who is also foreign minister, will call on Acting President J Y Pillay.

    Emeritus Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong and Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean will host her to meals separately and the Nobel laureate will have breakfast at a hawker centre with Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan.

    Also on her agenda is IE Singapore’s Global Conversations dialogue with Singapore businesses, said MFA.

    In 2015, Myanmar was Singapore’s 28th largest trading partner, with total trade at S$3.57 billion.

    For Myanmar, Singapore was its third largest trading partner after China and Thailand. As of end-October this year, Singapore was the second largest investor in Myanmar with cumulative investment at US$15.6 billion, after China (US$18.5 billion).

    During her three-day visit, Ms Suu Kyi will get an orchid named in her honour at the Singapore Botanic Gardens. She will also receive a briefing by the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau, said MFA.

    Ms Suu Kyi last visited Singapore in 2013 when she was Myanmar’s opposition leader.

    During this official visit, she will be accompanied by Union Minister for Commerce U Than Myint, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs U Kyaw Tin, and officials from the Ministry of National Planning and Finance, President’s Office, and Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • United Nations: Myanmar Seeking Ethnic Cleansing Of Rohingyas

    United Nations: Myanmar Seeking Ethnic Cleansing Of Rohingyas

    Myanmar is seeking the ethnic cleansing of the Muslim Rohingya minority from its territory, a senior UN official has told the BBC.

    Armed forces have been killing Rohingya in Rakhine state, forcing many to flee to neighbouring Bangladesh, says John McKissick of the UN refugee agency.

    The government of Myanmar, also known as Burma, has been conducting counter-insurgency operations since coordinated attacks on border guards in October.

    It denies reports of atrocities.

    Burmese officials say Rohingyas are setting fire to their own houses in northern Rakhine state. The BBC cannot visit the area to verify what is occurring there as journalists and aid workers have been barred.

    The Rohingya, who number about one million, are seen by many of Myanmar’s Buddhist majority as illegal migrants from Bangladesh.

    ‘Collective punishment’

    Although Bangladesh’s official policy is not to allow in illegal entrants across the border, the foreign ministry has confirmed that thousands of Rohingyas have already sought refuge in Bangladesh. Thousands more are reportedly gathering on the border.

    Efforts to resolve the issue must focus on “the root cause” inside Myanmar, Mr McKissick, head of the UN refugee agency UNHCR in the Bangladeshi border town of Cox’s Bazar told BBC Bengali’s Akbar Hossain.

    He said the Myanmar military and Border Guard Police had “engaged in collective punishment of the Rohingya minority” after the murders of nine border guards on 9 October which some politicians blamed on a Rohingya militant group.

    Security forces have been “killing men, shooting them, slaughtering children, raping women, burning and looting houses, forcing these people to cross the river” into Bangladesh, Mr McKissick said.

    “Now it’s very difficult for the Bangladeshi government to say the border is open because this would further encourage the government of Myanmar to continue the atrocities and push them out until they have achieved their ultimate goal of ethnic cleansing of the Muslim minority in Myanmar,” he said.

    On Wednesday, the Bangladesh foreign ministry summoned Myanmar’s ambassador to express “deep concern” over the military operation in northern Rakhine state.

    It said “desperate people” were crossing the border seeking safety and shelter and asked Myanmar to “ensure the integrity of its border”.

    Authorities in Bangladesh have been detaining and repatriating hundreds of fleeing Rohingya.

    Map showing Maungdaw's location in Rakhine State© BBC Map showing Maungdaw’s location in Rakhine State

    Earlier this week, Human Rights Watch released satellite images which it said showed that more than 1,000 homes had been razed in Rohingya villages over the past six weeks.

    What is happening in Rakhine state?

    A massive security operation was launched last month after nine police officers were killed in co-ordinated attacks on border posts in Maungdaw.

    Some government officials blamed a militant Rohingya group for the attacks. Security forces then sealed off access to Maungdaw district and launched a counter-insurgency operation.

    Rohingya activists say more than 100 people have been killed and hundreds arrested amid the crackdown.

    Soldiers have also been accused of serious human rights abuses, including torture, rape and executions, which the government has flatly denied.

    It says militants have attacked helicopter gunships providing air support to troops.

    Who are the Rohingya?

    The estimated one million Muslim Rohingya are seen by many in mainly Buddhist Myanmar as illegal migrants from Bangladesh. They are denied citizenship by the government despite many having lived there for generations.

    Communal violence in Rakhine state in 2012 left scores dead and displaced more than 100,000 people, with many Rohingya still remaining in decrepit camps.

    They face widespread discrimination and mistreatment.

    Is the government to blame?

    Myanmar held its first openly contested election in 25 years last November, with Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy winning a landslide victory.

    Though she is barred from the presidency due to a constitutional rule, Ms Suu Kyi, who serves as State Counsellor, is seen as de-facto leader.

    But her government, led as it is by a former human rights icon, has faced international criticism over the dire situation in Rakhine state.

    Rights groups have questioned why journalists and aid workers are not being allowed to enter northern Rakhine.

    Presidential spokesman Zaw Htay says the international media is misreporting what is going on.

     

    Source: www.msn.com

  • Rohingyas Fleeing Burma’s Scotched-Earth Campaign Turned Away By Bangladesh

    Rohingyas Fleeing Burma’s Scotched-Earth Campaign Turned Away By Bangladesh

    The broad estuary of the Naf River separates Bangladesh and Burma. On both sides of the Naf, armed forces have massed of late. The countries aren’t at war — against each other at least. Rather, the soldiers are on the lookout for members of the Rohingya ethnic group. Burma wants them out. Bangladesh wants them to turn around and go back.

    On Wednesday alone, Bangladeshi police said that more than 500 Rohingya Muslims made a desperate voyage across the Naf, adding to the thousands who have crossed in recent days. For the past month, human rights groups have documented the burning of entire Rohingya villages by Burma’s military. But the Bangladeshis, who for the most part share the Bengali language and Muslim faith with the Rohingyas, say they have no room for refugees.

    “We nabbed them after they illegally trespassed [into Bangladesh]. They will be pushed back” to Burma, local police chief Shyamol Kumar Nath told Agence France-Presse.

    Fleeing Rohingyas who have spoken with reporters and human rights activists recounted killings and rapes in their villages. They fear suffering the same fate if Bangladesh forces them to make the return journey.

    The news agency Reuters reported that escalating violence has killed scores and displaced about 30,000 in recent weeks. The violence seems to have been triggered by an attack on Oct. 9 against Burmese border police that killed nine. Police blamed Rohingya militants — accusing them of ties to radical Islam — and began a scorched-earth campaign. The roots of anti-Rohingya sentiment go back decades, if not centuries, in Burma, a majority-Buddhist nation also known as Myanmar. Rohingyas are denied citizenship in Burma.

    Burma’s de facto leader, Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, has expressed concern about the fate of the Rohingyas but has also accused them of causing the violence. Suu Kyi has had to balance her record of human rights activism with a growing tide of Buddhist nationalism that has emboldened the military, which ruled the country for decades before her.

    Since communal violence occurred between ethnic Burmese and Rohingyas in 2012, more than 32,000 Rohingyas have legally registered as refugees at camps in Bangladesh. According to the AFP, many of those who have fled in recent days are hiding out in those camps, hoping to blend in. Thousands more are waiting to cross the Naf into Bangladesh.

    “Difficult as it is for the Bangladesh government to absorb large numbers, it seems to me there is no other choice,” said John McKissick, who heads the U.N. refugee agency’s office in southern Bangladesh. “Because the only other choice is death and suffering.”

     

    Source: www.washingtonpost.com