Tag: Myanmar

  • Anggota Media Farid Khan ‘Diberikan Nasihat’ Kerana ‘Kesalahan Facebook’

    Anggota Media Farid Khan ‘Diberikan Nasihat’ Kerana ‘Kesalahan Facebook’

    Anggota pasukan media Encik Farid Khan, yang dikatakan secara tidak sengaja memuatnaikkan petisyen di laman Facebook milik peribadi Encik Farid Khan, sudah diberikan kaunseling.

    Petisyen itu meminta pemimpin de facto Myanmar Aung San Suu Kyi untuk dibicarakan tentang pelanggaran hak asasi manusia terhadap Rohingya.

    Cik Suu Kyi berada di bawah tekanan negara-negara yang mempunyai penduduk Islam yang besar untuk menghentikan kekerasan terhadap minoriti Muslim Myanmar.

    Laman All Singapore Stuff pada Selasa (5 September) memuatnaik sebuah artikel yang menyebut bahawa Encik Farid “memberi sokongannya kepada” petisyen tersebut. Artikel tersebut mengandungi sekeping gambar yang kelihatan seperti pautan bagi petisyen tersebut di laman Facebook milik peribadi Encik Farid.

    “Kami sudah mengeluarkan kenyataan berkaitan dengan isu tersebut dan sudah menasihati kakitangan terbabit, ” kata Encik Borhan Saini, pengurus kempen Encik Farid.

    “Kami juga meminta pasukan media kami untuk lebih berhati-hati. Kami menganggap isu sudah ditangani dengan secukupnya dan kini isu ini sudah ditutup.”

    Dalam satu kenyataan di halaman Facebook rasminya, Encik Farid menolak laporan All Singapore Stuff sebagai “langsung tidak benar”. Beliau berkata pautan itu secara tidak sengaja disiarkan oleh seorang anggota pasukan medianya yang menguruskan laman Facebook peribadinya. “Ini berlaku akibat menggunakan alat layar sentuh,” katanya.

    Encik Farid menambah bahawa beliau sudah menutup laman Facebooknya sendiri untuk mengelakkan peristiwa itu daripada berlaku.

    Menganggap keputusan untuk menutup halaman itu sebagai “langkah berjaga-jaga”, Encik Borhan berkata beliau merancang untuk meminta All Singapore Stuff untuk menurunkan laporannya.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Presidential Hopeful Farid Khan Supports Taking ASSK To Court Over Ethnic Cleansing In Rohingya

    Presidential Hopeful Farid Khan Supports Taking ASSK To Court Over Ethnic Cleansing In Rohingya

    Presidential candidate Faird Khan has thrown his weight behind a petition calling on the European Court of Human Rights to try Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi for human rights violations over the “ethnic cleansing” taking place against the Rohingya community in her country.

    Farid Khan’s personal Facebook page shared a link to a Change.org petition 3 hours ago which reads: “Take Aung San Suu Kyi to European court of human rights over ethnic cleansing in Rohingya.”

    The petition reads:

    We have had a storm of footages and reports being validateded through the media, governments, and the united nation’s inspectors such as the ex UN president Kofi Annan, current UN investigators, Theresa May, Jeremy Corbyn, BBC, Times, etc and the alike have all confirmed that the Mayanmarian government have and are persecuting and ethic cleansing the minority rohingya (Rakhine State) community and its people.

    This has to Stop!This torture is done only due to the minoritie’s faith and the particularly religion practised (Islam) which the army and the government deems it foreign to the state’s religion which is Buddhism. The Buddhist themselves such as monks are taking arms and destroying innocent beings and villages.

    Young children, women and men, the old and the disabled are all being tortured, set on fire, raped, murdered and their houses burned.

    We as the humankind have to take action and take the head of the mayanmar state Aung San Suu Kyi and the armed forces’ commander-in-chief, Ming Aung Hlaing to the International court (The Hague) I.C.J or to The European Court of Human Rights so both of them can answer to their hate crimes.The current leaders are silent but little remarks made. Last year Theresa May invited the head of Mayanmar to Downing Street for a discussion and to join her for an afternoon tea.

    This is absurd.Please bring justice back in this world and with your help we can achieve sending this message of support and expression of unity to those leaders that have no mercy. So it may change their conception. Please help us raise the fees for Human Rights Lawyers, court fees etc

    https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/hussein-mohamed

    Thank you

    Many kind regards

    your sincerely, Hussein M

    The petition has gathered 139,353 supporters as of reporting time.

    This is among the first political statements made by the aspiring presidential candidate.

     

    Rilek1Corner

     

  • Myanmar Football Team Rewarded $68,000 For Victory Over Singapore

    Myanmar Football Team Rewarded $68,000 For Victory Over Singapore

    The Myanmar Under-22 football team have been rewarded handsomely for their 2-0 victory over Singapore on Monday.

    It is understood that the team received a US$50,000 (S$68,250) bonus after winning their SEA Games opener.

    Facebook page Thai Futbol carried a picture of the team being handed a brown envelope supposedly containing US$30,000.

    According to sources, the US$30,000 came from KBZ Bank, while Myanmar Football Federation president U Zaw Zaw and former Yangon United chairman U Tay Za contributed US$10,000 each.

    Former Singapore national coach P N Sivaji, who is now technical director of Myanmar National League side Hanthawaddy United, told The New Paper that such gestures are not uncommon.

    He said: “There are quite a few patrons and well-wishers who have shown great willingness to support and reward the team.”

    While Myanmar Under-22 coach Gerd Zeise has set an initial target of reaching the semi-finals, expectations are high as they have eight players who featured in the 2015 Under-20 World Cup and also won a silver medal at the last SEA Games.

    They got off to a good start in Kuala Lumpur as Aung Thu’s goals either side of half-time were enough to seal three points in a group that also comprises hosts Malaysia, Laos and Brunei.

    TNP understands that the Young Lions were offered $2,000 each to beat Myanmar on Monday, and that figure could increase for tonight’s do-or-die game against Malaysia in which they have to get at least a point to keep their semi-final hopes alive.

    Elsewhere, the Sultan of Johor gave RM4million (S$1.27m) to the Football Association of Malaysia after their Under-22 side qualified for the AFC U-23 Championship for the first time last month.

    The players were initially promised RM6,000 each for their efforts but can now look forward to a bigger payday.

     

    Source: http://www.tnp.sg/

  • Khan Osman Sulaiman: Rising Islamophobia, Are Muslims In Singapore Walking On A Tightrope?

    Khan Osman Sulaiman: Rising Islamophobia, Are Muslims In Singapore Walking On A Tightrope?

    Ahok got 2 years jail in Indonesia for blasphemy and the world cries foul. Yes its jail time. Not murder.

    When The Rohingyas were persecuted, not many were outrightly denouncing the Myanmar government for its crimes against humanity.

    Islam got slammed instead for bigotry. Clerics are ridiculed. Judges chastised. The press also solidifies the hatred/prejudice some people have for the religion by pushing out articles to make the religion look bad instead of correctly pointing the atrocities of humans, using religion to promote their political agendas.

    Shanmugam recently has called on the United States (and the world) to pay attention to the rise of “political Islam” and radicalism in Southeast.

    Instead, I say we should also pay close attention toward islamophobia.

    With rising islamophobia across the world and Singapore, the Muslims in Singapore are walking on a tightrope. We get scrutinized even for raising fundamental issues.

    The government’s distrust on the Malay/Muslim community dates back to LKY’s era. It has continued with the current administration led by his son Lee Hsien Loong but with a new dimension added to it. ‘Radicalization’

    With radicalization on the rise, and the effort to look into its emergence in Singapore, rightfully, the government may have fail to also give due consideration towards an emerging trend in Singapore. Islamophobia.

    I’d came across many postings on social media to kill the Muslim. To incarcerate anyone with the slightest differences of opinions. To remove citizenships of Singaporean Muslims and ship them ‘back’ to Saudi/Pakistan etc etc.

    It’s a growing trend if left unchecked, may rip apart the delicate social fabric currently maintained.

    Radicalization is a problem. So is Islamophobia. Deal with it concurrently without further aggravating the growing pressure my community faced from the gov and public.

     

    Source: Khan Osman Sulaiman

  • Myanmar Arrests Buddhist Monks Accused Of Targeting Muslims

    Myanmar Arrests Buddhist Monks Accused Of Targeting Muslims

    Myanmar police have arrested two hardline Buddhist nationalists and are seeking several more after they clashed with Muslims in the country’s commercial capital Yangon, underscoring the authorities’ growing concern over rising religious tensions.

    The arrests came after nationalists led by the Patriotic Monks Union (PMU) raided flats on Tuesday in a Yangon district with a large Muslim population, igniting scuffles that were only broken up when police fired shots into the air.

    Two weeks ago, the same people had forced the closure of two Muslim schools.

    “We have arrested two people since yesterday evening, and are still looking for the rest of them,” said Police Major Khin Maung Oo, in charge the police station in Yangon’s Mingalar Taung Nyunt district, where this week’s clashes took place.

    The 13-month-old administration of Aung San Suu Kyi had made tentative moves against nationalist hardliners, but the arrests mark a significant step-up in the government’s efforts, highlighting official concerns over a potential outbreak of violence in the country’s main city, which has a substantial Muslim population.

    Tensions between majority Buddhists and Myanmar’s Muslim minority have simmered since scores were killed and tens of thousands displaced in intercommunal clashes accompanying the onset of the country’s democratic transition in 2012 and 2013.

    Mutual distrust has deepened since October, when attacks by Rohingya Muslim insurgents in northwestern Rakhine state provoked a massive military counter-offensive, causing about 75,000 Rohingya to flee across the border to Bangladesh.

    Brigadier-General Mya Win, the commander of Yangon’s regional police security command, said extra security forces had been deployed and the police were on high alert to prevent communal violence.

    “We are patrolling around Muslim areas and have taken security measures around places of worship,” he told Reuters news agency.

    Leaders of the PMU said they were acting independently of the Ma Ba Tha, a larger hardline Buddhist and anti-Muslim organisation that counts among its leaders the firebrand monk Wirathu, who once called himself “Myanmar’s Bin Laden.”

    Ma Ba Tha holds its nationwide congress in Yangon – a city of more than five million that has been a focus of foreign investment since a former military government ceded power in 2012 – in two weeks and is expecting about 10,000 monks to attend.

    Targeting Muslims

    In both incidents, PMU monks and lay sympathisers targeted Muslim areas after attending a trial of fellow nationalists facing charges of inciting violence during a protest in front of the United States embassy in Yangon last year.

    “We didn’t want any confrontation with the nationalists so we allowed them to shut down our schools,” said Tin Shwe, the chairman of the Muslim schools, referring to an incident on April 28.

    Tin Shwe, and a lawmaker from the ruling National League for Democracy, said the nationalists came to the schools with local administrators and policemen.

    On Tuesday the group – again accompanied by local authorities and police – searched a building in a different part of Yangon shortly before midnight, claiming some Rohingya Muslims were staying there illegally.

    Local residents confronted the nationalists, gathered in front of the building, prompting police officers to fire warning shots to break up the crowd.

    A Yangon court issued the arrest warrant against seven people, including two monks, charging them with inciting communal violence, which carries a penalty of up to two years in prison.

    At a news conference on Tuesday, organised shortly before the arrest warrants were issued, the nationalists vowed to keep fighting Muslim influence in the country, citing government reluctance to “protect race and religion” in Myanmar.

    “We are protecting our people because government authorities are reluctant to do that. Even though many people hate us, we are not creating problems,” U Thuseikta, a monk and a senior official of the PMU, told reporters.

    Tin Shwe, the Muslim community leader, said: “We want to get equal treatment and be protected by the government – we voted for them with our hands.”

     

    Source: www.aljazeera.com