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  • #91
    Hundreds of Rohingya cross into Bangladesh
    22 Nov 2016

    DHAKA - Hundreds of Rohingya have arrived in Bangladesh after fleeing violence in neighbouring Myanmar, community leaders said Tuesday, but border guards have pushed back hundreds more despite a United Nations plea to let them in.


    The UN says up to 30,000 Rohingya have been displaced by violence in Myanmar's Rakhine state, where dozens of people have been killed in clashes with the military

    The UN says up to 30,000 Rohingya have been displaced by violence in Myanmar's Rakhine state, where dozens of people have been killed in clashes with the military, and has urged Dhaka to open its border to them.

    Instead the Bangladesh government, under pressure from local communities to limit the number of migrants, has intensified patrols along the 237-kilometre (147-mile) border to prevent a large-scale influx.

    But Rohingya leaders told AFP an estimated 1,000 have still managed to get in over the last week.

    Most are hiding out in camps for the 32,000 legal refugees already living in southeast Bangladesh, fearing repatriation if they are found by the authorities.

    Among them is Mohammad Amin, 17, who said he and 15 others people fled their homes in Rakhine five days ago and reached Bangladesh by swimming across the Naf river that divides the two countries.

    "The (Myanmar) army killed my father and elder brother. I hid on a hill and then walked and swam across the river, and took refuge at a mosque (in Bangladesh)," he told AFP by phone from Cox's Bazar near the border.

    "I don't know what happened to my mother and sister."

    State media reports in Myanmar say security forces have killed almost 70 people and arrested some 400 since the lockdown began six weeks ago, but activists say the number could be far higher.

    Myanmar troops have poured into a strip of land that is home to the stateless Muslim Rohingya minority since a series of attacks on police border posts last month.

    Witnesses and activists have reported troops killing Rohingya, raping women and looting and burning their houses.

    Commanders of the Border Guard Bangladesh said their troops had blocked nearly 300 Rohingya from crossing the border overnight, the highest number since the crisis began last month.

    "We're preventing them on the zero line, especially those who were trying to cross the barbed-wire fences erected by Myanmar," said Imran Ullah Sarker.

    He said many were sent back after they managed to sneak across unmanned parts of the border.

    Bangladesh is also patrolling the Naf river, the commanders said.

    "They told us that their houses were torched and they came here seeking safe shelter," said one border guard official.

    bangkokpost.com
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    • #92

      24 November 2016


      Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi, pictured in May 2016.Reuters spoke to about a dozen diplomats and aid workers, who described the previously unreported discussions in Burma and New York on condition of anonymity.

      Allegations of abuse
      attacks on three border posts on 9 October that killed nine police officerspulling out of a regional soccer tournamentVijay Nambiara citizen verification programme aimed at the mostly stateless Rohingya and a special government-level taskforce on Arakan
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      • #93
        Myanmar crisis sparks Muslim protests in Asian capitals
        November 25, 2016

        Ethnic Rohingya Muslim refugees hold placards and shout slogans during a protest against the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, outside the Myanmar Embassy in Kuala Lumpur on Friday.
        AFP PHOTO / MANAN VATSYAYANA

        DHAKA - Angry Muslim protesters took to the streets from Jakarta to Dhaka on Friday to denounce Myanmar over allegations of indiscriminate killing and rape in a military crackdown on the country's Rohingya Muslim minority.

        Around 5,000 Bangladeshi Muslims demonstrated in the capital Dhaka after Friday prayers, with hundreds more protesting in Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta and Bangkok to accuse Myanmar of ethnic cleansing and genocide in its northern Rakhine state.

        Muslim-majority Malaysia's Cabinet also issued a statement condemning the violence, an unusually strong criticism against a fellow member of the 10-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean).

        "Malaysia... calls on the government of Myanmar to take all necessary actions to address the alleged ethnic cleansing," the statement said.

        It said the Myanmar ambassador would be summoned over the crisis and that Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman would meet with de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other top Myanmar officials "at the earliest possible date."

        Up to 30,000 Rohingya have abandoned their homes in Myanmar to escape the unfolding violence, the UN says, after troops poured into the narrow strip where they live earlier this month.

        Rohingya are denied citizenship and subject to harsh restrictions in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, where many view them as illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh, though many have lived been in Myanmar for generations.

        The Dhaka protesters gathered outside the Baitul Mokarram mosque, the country's largest, to demand an end to the violence, denounce Suu Kyi, and calling for Bangladesh to accept fleeing Rohingya.

        Around 500 Malaysians and Rohingya marched through a heavy tropical downpour from a Kuala Lumpur mosque to Myanmar's embassy carrying banners denouncing the Rakhine "genocide."

        Abu Tahir, a 60-year-old Rohingya man who demonstrated with a chain coiled around his body, said he had been cut off from his family in Rakhine since he fled two years ago.

        "The Rohingya are being treated like dogs, and are being killed," he said, tears rolling down his face.

        Amir Hamzah, 60, who heads the Malaysian Muslims Coalition, an NGO, said "the people of Malaysia strongly condemn" Myanmar's actions.

        "We want an immediate stop to the violence. This is cruel," he said.

        In Jakarta, around 200 demonstrators from Indonesian Islamic organisations protested outside Myanmar's embassy.

        Chanting "Allahu Akbar! (God is greater!)", they called for the government of Indonesia -- the world's most populous Muslim nation -- to break off diplomatic ties with Myanmar and for Suu Kyi's 1991 Nobel Peace Prize to be revoked.

        "This genocide is happening to women, children and the elderly," said Maya Hayati, a 34-year-old housewife.

        "If they (Myanmar) don't want them, then it's probably better to send them to another country. Don't torture them like that in their own country."

        The UN says the stateless Rohingya are among the world's most persecuted minorities.

        The UN refugee agency says well over 120,000 have fled Rakhine since a previous bout of bloody unrest in 2012, many braving a perilous sea journey to Malaysia.

        Last year, thousands were stranded at sea after a well-worn trafficking route through Thailand collapsed following a police crackdown sparked by the discovery of brutal human-trafficking camps along the Malaysia border.

        nationmultimedia.com
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        • #94


          Published on Nov 25, 2016


          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.

          A spokesman said the government was "very, very disappointed" by the comments.

          Burmese officials say Rohingya 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.

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

          Some are using smugglers to get into Bangladesh, while others have bribed border guards, according to Amnesty International.

          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.

          Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi is in a delicate position. She is Myanmar's de facto leader, but security is under the control of the autonomous armed forces.

          If Ms Suu Kyi bows to international pressure and sets up a credible investigation into the alleged abuses in Rakhine state, she risks fracturing her relationship with the army. It could jeopardise the stability of her young government.

          So for the last six weeks Ms Suu Kyi has kept her head firmly in the sand, avoiding journalists and press conferences.

          When forced, she has commented that the military in Rakhine is operating according to the "rule of law". Few believe that to be the case.

          While there are loud calls from overseas for action, most Burmese have very little sympathy for the Rohingya. The army's "clearance operations" against the "violent attackers" of Rakhine state appear to have strong popular support, putting Ms Suu Kyi under very little domestic pressure.

          Myanmar's presidential spokesman Zaw Htay said Mr McKissick "should maintain his professionalism and his ethics as a United Nations officer because his comments are just allegations".

          "He should only speak based on concrete and strong evidence on the ground," 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, which Amnesty International condemned as a violation of international law.

          Bangladesh does not recognise Rohingya as refugees, and many of those fleeing Myanmar have been "forced into hiding and are suffering a severe lack of food and medical care", the rights group said.

          Rohingya refugees and asylum-seekers have arrived into Bangladesh from Myanmar in waves since at least the 1970s. There are some 33,000 registered Rohingya refugees living in Cox's Bazar's two camps, Kutupalong and Nayapara.

          Earlier this week, Human Rights Watch released satellite images which it said showed that more than 1,200 homes had been razed in Rohingya villages over the past six weeks.

          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.

          For More News and Updates tuned to our channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJWB...
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          • #95
            Soldiers are "killing men, slaughtering children, raping women"

            Myanmar wants ethnic cleansing of Rohingya - UN official
            24 November 2016

            Soldiers are "killing men, slaughtering children, raping women", says John McKissick of the UN refugee agency in Bangladesh

            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.

            A spokesman said the government was "very, very disappointed" by the comments.

            Burmese officials say Rohingya 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.

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

            Some are using smugglers to get into Bangladesh, while others have bribed border guards, according to Amnesty International.

            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.


            Where is Aung San Suu Kyi? - BBC Myanmar Correspondent Jonah Fisher

            Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi is in a delicate position. She is Myanmar's de facto leader, but security is under the control of the autonomous armed forces.

            If Ms Suu Kyi bows to international pressure and sets up a credible investigation into the alleged abuses in Rakhine state, she risks fracturing her relationship with the army. It could jeopardise the stability of her young government.

            So for the last six weeks Ms Suu Kyi has kept her head firmly in the sand, avoiding journalists and press conferences.

            When forced, she has commented that the military in Rakhine is operating according to the "rule of law". Few believe that to be the case.

            While there are loud calls from overseas for action, most Burmese have very little sympathy for the Rohingya. The army's "clearance operations" against the "violent attackers" of Rakhine state appear to have strong popular support, putting Ms Suu Kyi under very little domestic pressure.



            Myanmar's presidential spokesman Zaw Htay said Mr McKissick "should maintain his professionalism and his ethics as a United Nations officer because his comments are just allegations".

            "He should only speak based on concrete and strong evidence on the ground," 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, which Amnesty International condemned as a violation of international law.

            Bangladesh does not recognise Rohingya as refugees, and many of those fleeing Myanmar have been "forced into hiding and are suffering a severe lack of food and medical care", the rights group said.

            Rohingya refugees and asylum-seekers have arrived into Bangladesh from Myanmar in waves since at least the 1970s. There are some 33,000 registered Rohingya refugees living in Cox's Bazar's two camps, Kutupalong and Nayapara.

            Earlier this week, Human Rights Watch released satellite images which it said showed that more than 1,200 homes had been razed in Rohingya villages over the past six weeks.

            Image copyright Human Rights Watch Image caption A satellite image of the village of Wa Peik, Maungdaw district on 10 November


            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.

            Hundreds of thousands of undocumented Rohingya are estimated to live in Bangladesh, having left Myanmar over decades.

            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.

            bbc.com
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            • #96
              Rohingya Solidarity Protest at Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok
              Teeranai Charuvastra
              November 25, 2016


              Protesters in front of the Myanmar Embassy on Sathorn Road in Bangkok on Friday.
              Image: @Happybirdyday / Twitter

              BANGKOK
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              • #97
                Thailand: Hundreds protests violence against Rohingya

                oHdOrXz.jpg
                Rohingyans and Thai Muslim Community members gather in front of the Myanmar Embassy to held a protest against violence and mass killings against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, in Bangkok, Thailand on November 25, 2016. The Muslims group demand to Myanmar Government to allow humanitarian assistant to Rohingyan people in the refugee camps and ask for an end to the violence over Rohingyans.
                ( Guillaume Payen - Anadolu Agency )

                http://aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/-thailand-hundreds-protests-violence-against-rohingya/692979
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                • #98
                  Review Myanmar's Asean membership, says Malaysia minister
                  30 Nov 2016

                  KUALA LUMPUR - Myanmar's membership of Asean must be reviewed because of its "ethnic cleansing" of the Rohingya Muslim minority, a senior Malaysian minister warned Wednesday.


                  Ethnic Rohingya refugees in Kuala Lumpur protest against the persecution of the Muslims minority in Myanmar on Nov 25, 2016.
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                  • #99
                    10,000 Rohingya from Myanmar Have Landed in Bangladesh: UN
                    Reported by BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated online news service.
                    2016-11-30


                    Bangladeshi Muslims in Dhaka protest against the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, Nov. 25, 2016.
                    AFP

                    More than 10,000 Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar have crossed the border into Bangladesh to flee violence that has escalated over the past two months, a United Nations official and a Rohingya community leader said Wednesday.

                    Bangladeshi authorities said they were now allowing some vulnerable refugees into the country on a humanitarian basis. Earlier, officials had stated that they were sealing the southeastern border with Myanmar and pushing back hundreds of people trying to cross over, despite reports of killings and the burning of Rohingya homes during a Burmese government crackdown in neighboring Rakhine state.

                    About 10,000 of the new influx of Rohingya were at his camp while others were spread out elsewhere in the southeast.

                    Another Rohingya leader told Voice of America (VOA), a sister entity of RFA, that many wanted to return to their old way of life.

                    Current crisis

                    Since a Myanmar military crackdown began in Rakhine state in early October, Rohingyas were entering the country through remote, inaccessible border points, Bangladesh Foreign Minister Abul Hasan Mahmud Ali told reporters last week.

                    Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal said Bangladesh wanted the Rohingyas to return to their homes in Rakhine.

                    Long-standing problem

                    The targets of large-scale ethnic violence since 1978, Rohingya Muslims have fled Myanmar for Bangladesh and other countries. As many as 300,000 to 500,000 Rohingyas are in Bangladesh, according to government estimates.

                    The government has denied accusations that soldiers committed extrajudicial killings, rape, and arson in Rohingya communities since the lockdown began. Security forces have arrested more than 400 people and killed nearly 70 others since the crackdown began, state media reported.

                    rfa.org

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                    • Rohingya crisis: Kofi Annan team arrives in Sittwe
                      2 December 2016


                      2012 file photo of former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
                      (Photo: Wikicommons)

                      A team led by former UN chief Kofi Annanborder posts on 9 October.

                      Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi had appointed the nine-member commission before the current fighting erupted to advise on the restive state, where ethnic Arakanese Buddhists and the Rohingya Muslims have lived separately since clashes in 2012fled to Bangladesh in recent weeks.

                      Suu Kyi bowed to weeks of international pressure late on Thursday to appoint a commission to investigate the original attacks and the allegations of human rights abuses by the military.

                      However, she raised eyebrows with her pick for the chief of the team, Vice-president Myint Swe, who was head of the feared military intelligence under former junta leader Than Shwe.

                      Myint Swe, a close confidant of the former junta supremo, was the chief of special operations in Rangoon when Than Shwe ordered a crackdown on anti-junta protests led by Buddhist monks in 2007, known as the Saffron Revolution.

                      dvb.no
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                      • Mass rally in Malaysia calling for support of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims
                        Shannon Teoh
                        4 hours ago

                        KUALA LUMPUR A crowd gathering at a stadium in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday (Dec 4) in support of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.
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                        • Suu Kyi must stop Rohingya 'genocide': Malaysia PM
                          December 04, 2016

                          KUALA LUMPUR - Aung San Suu Kyi must step in to prevent the "genocide" of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, Malaysia's prime minister said Sunday as he mocked the Nobel laureate for her inaction.

                          Addressing a 5,000-strong rally in Kuala Lumpur, Najib Razak said the Myanmar government must stop the bloody crackdown in its far west that has sent thousands of Rohingya fleeing, many with stories of rape, torture and murder.

                          "What's the use of Aung San Suu Kyi having a Nobel prize?" Najib asked a raucous crowd.

                          "We want to tell Aung San Suu Kyi, enough is enough... We must and we will defend Muslims and Islam," he said as supporters chanted "Allahu Akbar" ("God is greater").

                          "We want the OIC(Organisation of Islamic Cooperation) to act.

                          "Please do something. The UN do something. The world cannot sit and watch genocide taking place," said Najib.

                          More than 10,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh in recent weeks, the United Nations said on Wednesday, escaping a bloody army crackdown in the north of Rakhine state.

                          Arrivals in Bangladesh have told AFP horrifying stories of gang rape, torture and murder at the hands of Myanmar's security forces.

                          Myanmar has denied allegations of abuse, but has also banned foreign journalists and independent investigators from the area.

                          Muslim-majority Malaysia has recently upped its criticism of Myanmar for its handling of the crisis.

                          Last month it summoned the Myanmar ambassador, while around 500 Malaysians and Rohingya marched to the embassy in the Malaysian capital carrying banners denouncing the "genocide."

                          A senior minister has called on Asean, the ten-country Southeast Asia bloc, to review Myanmar's membership, while a strongly worded statement from the foreign ministry Saturday accused Myanmar of engaging in "ethnic cleansing."

                          But analysts said Sunday the issue is a convenient smokescreen for Najib, who is fighting allegations he took part in the looting of billions of dollars of public cash through state fund 1MDB.

                          Both he and the fund deny any wrongdoing.

                          James Chin, director of the Asia Institute at the University of Tasmania, told AFP that Najib "is there (at the rally) to boost his standing as an Islamic leader," with a general election looming.

                          "Najib is looking for anything to make him look good and the Rohingya issue is simply a tool," said Bridget Welsh, a Malaysia politics expert with Turkey's Ipek University.

                          She added that if Najib's government really cared for the Rohingya, they would "reexamine their own treatment of the community within Malaysia."

                          Malaysia might be a beacon for Rohingya fleeing Myanmar but many have said they end up in a precarious and stateless limbo and suffer a new kind of marginalisation.

                          nationmultimedia.com
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                          • Malaysian PM urges intervention in Arakan State
                            5 December 2016


                            Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, pictured addressing the Annual Meeting 2013 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on January 25, 2013.
                            (Photo: Wikicommons)
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                            • UN says it gets reports daily of killings and rapes in Arakan
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                              • Myanmar Rohingya militancy `well-organized,

                                The emergence of a "well-organized and well-funded" Muslim militancy behind attacks on security forces in western Myanmar could further de-stabilize the conflict-ridden region, an international think tank warned on Wednesday.

                                Harakah al-Yaqin, or Faith Movement, formed by members of the persecuted Rohingya minority, has been blamed for deadly attacks on security forces in northern Rakhine state, including an October 9 assault when hundreds of fighters, armed mostly with swords and sticks, overran three border police bases.
                                The violence prompted a sweeping crackdown on the Rohingya population, thousands of whom have fled to Bangladesh in recent weeks amid accusations of mass killings and rapes. The government denies the allegations.

                                In its report, the International Crisis Group conducted interviews with members of Harakah al-Yaqin that suggest it is overseen by a committee of Rohingya emigres in Saudi Arabia.

                                The research also found evidence of ground operations organized by 20 men, experienced in guerilla warfare, who trained hundreds of locals to use weapons and crude explosives.
                                Crisis Group's Asia programme director Tim Johnston told dpa at least some of the funding is believed to come from private donors in the Middle East.
                                "There are real risks that if the government mishandles the situation, for instance with the further use of excessive force, it will push more of the Muslim population in that area to support al-Yaqin, entrenching the armed group and a cycle of violence," he wrote in an editorial published by Time magazine.
                                "It may also create conditions for radicalization that could be exploited by transnational jihadists to pursue their own agendas in Burma."
                                Rights groups and Rohingya activists cast doubt on some of the findings and said the majority of the hundreds of thousands of Muslims confined to internal displacement camps and villages across Rakhine state did not support the insurgency.

                                "Villagers are consistently telling us they want rights and want to return home," said Matthew Smith, founder of NGO Fortify Rights. "No one is telling us they want militancy or armed resistance."
                                Richard Potter, a researcher with the Burma Human Rights Network, said recent contact suggested the militants had run out of ammunition and scattered in recent weeks.
                                "If there's money that's being gathered for them I can't see where it's going," he said.

                                http://www.nationmultimedia.com/news..._plus/30302220

                                There was actually quite a thought provoking letter to the Editor, published in The Nation quite recently- but I can no longer find it. It was to do with the relative population growth rates of the Buddhist majority and Muslim minority in Burma. It also included Bangladesh, for good measure. Bottom line- the Muslims have been way way out breeding the Burmese Buddhists, in both Rakhine and Bangladesh. There is no question that a significant amount of the current Rakhine population have illegally emigrated from Bangladesh also, in the last quarter century or so. Their residence status is unclear.

                                Complain all you will, but this will lead to racial tension- always. I am just pointing out that the Burmese have a point, too. The worlds largest country, China, was able to control it's population growth- and for good reason. Bangladesh, and Rakhine also, needs to do so too- otherwise, catastrophe will surely unfold.

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