By
SIMON ROUGHNEEN
THE IRRAWADDY
Friday, April 19, 2013
Thousands of Rohingya have fled to countries such as Bangladesh,
Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand over the past year, giving Burma’s
neighbors and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) an
ostensible stake in addressing the Rohingya crisis.
But despite launching a new human rights body at the most recent
Asean summit in Phnom Penh in November 2012—including a surprise clause
acknowledging “universal” human rights norms—the group has largely stuck
to its non-interference mantra.
Since June 2012, over 220 people have died in what has widely been
described as sectarian fighting between Buddhists and Muslims in Burma,
with most of the deaths in Arakan State in the country’s west, where
most of Burma’s estimated 800,000 Rohingya live.
In Arakan State last June, mobs of Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya
clashed after the May rape and murder of a young Arakanese woman, a
crime for which three Rohingya men were arrested. Arakanese retaliation
quickly spread to Myanmar’s other Muslim groups, with ten pilgrims
lynched by a Buddhist Arakanese mob in June—a crime for which nobody has
been charged.
There were more Arakanese-Muslim clashes in October 2012, and in
March this year, 43 were killed—some gruesomely and most of them
Muslims—in central Burma, after which the sole arrests, to date, have
been 3 Muslims who were involved in a shop row at the outset of the
violence.
What at first looked like local sectarian fighting later took on the
form of a vicious anti-Rohingya and then anti-Muslim campaign, with
rabble-rousing monk Wirathu at the forefront. Burma’s current government
has not only not done enough to prevent or stop the violence; it has
been complicit, according to some.
The Rohingya say that they have lived in what is now Burma for
generations. The Burmese government says they are illegal immigrants.
Many Burmese, including senior members of the long-feted opposition
National League for Democracy, men who themselves spent years in jail as
political prisoners, also regard the Rohingya as illegal immigrants.
Asked last October whether the Rohingya should be granted Burmese
citizenship, Tin Oo, a senior NLD figure, said that “those who are not
legal citizens of this country cannot stay,” adding that it was
difficult to establish how many Rohingya could be entitled to Burmese
citizenship.
“This is a difficult problem to solve,” he said. “When I was a young man, there were no Rohingya in Burma.”
Tin Oo’s party colleague, the opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, has
been criticized for her apparent reluctance to discuss anti-Muslim
violence in Burma.
Breaking this silence in Japan last week, Suu Kyi called for a revision of the citizenship laws.
“There is discrimination among citizens in our country,” she said.
“We should also determine if certain laws are a hindrance to equal
rights among citizens in the country, and revise them if we can.”
Mentioning a meeting she had recently with Burmese Muslim leaders,
she lamented the state of inter-faith relations in Burma, saying that
“this is a very sad state of affairs. We must learn to accommodate those
with different views from ours.”
There has been scant regional pressure on Burma to treat the Rohingya
in a more humane way. Asean’s two biggest Muslim-majority
member-states—Indonesia and Malaysia—have raised the Rohingya issue with
the Burmese government and have sent diplomatic and humanitarian
missions to Burma and to Arakan State. But they have for the most part
shied away from blunt public condemnation, as is often the way in
dealings between Asean countries.
However, the bloc as a whole has been reluctant to single out Burma.
Speaking at the most recent summit in Phnom Penh last November,
then-Asean Secretary General Surin Pitsuwan said that member states told
the Burma delegation that “if the issue is not handled by the Myanmar
government, there is a risk of radicalization and extremism in that
region.”
Speaking on the sidelines of the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) in
Vientiane on Nov. 6, a spokesman for Malaysian Prime Minister Najib
Razak expressed unease about the plight of Muslims in western Burma.
“Malaysia remains extremely concerned about ongoing tensions between
Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims in the Rakhine State of Myanmar,” he
said.
For the most part, that is as far as Asean or its member states have
gone in public, with the one exception being Indonesia. Foreign Minister
Marty Natelagawa told The Irrawaddy at the ASEM summit that “one core
issue in resolving the conflict is citizenship, and this is a matter the
Myanmar government must address in the future.”
However, Burmese President Thein Sein told the Democratic Voice of Burma recently that the law would not be changed.
If they were of a mind to, the Burmese government could issue some
sharp “heal thyself” type retorts to Jakarta or Putrajaya, in any case.
Indonesia has been accused of letting anti-Christian and anti-Ahmadi
sentiment get out of hand. Malaysia’s governing parties have dabbled in
some sectarian brinkmanship in the run-up to the May 5 election.
Hardliners linked to the government threatened to burn Bibles in an
unwitting parody of the Rev. Terry Jones, that Perkasa, the group
involved, said was in response to a row over whether Malaysia’s
Christians should be allowed use the word “Allah” in their literature.
The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) has been much more
assertive than Asean with Burma over attacks on the Rohingya, which the
OIC deems “genocide.”
Both Indonesia and Malaysia are part of an the OIC’s 11 country
“Contact Group,” which has pushed Burma for greater humanitarian access
to the roughly 100,000 Rohingya stuck in fetid camps in Arakan State.
The other nine members of the group are Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia,
Bangladesh, Brunei, Djibouti, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, Sudan and
Turkey, some of which have a torrid history of human rights abuses
directed at ethnic and religious minorities.
Burma will, for the first time, chair Asean in 2014, another factor
that will likely restrain the bloc’s members from tackling the Rohingya
issue head on. Burma had to forego its turn as chair in the past, as
Asean feared this would affect the groups’ relations with Western
countries.
Next year will be a crucial one for Asean, the final year before it
is scheduled to form a regional economic community, and arrangements for
Burma’s role as Asean chair will likely take precedence over political
or human rights concerns.
In late March, a United States-Asean meeting, looking ahead to
Burma’s chairing of the association, gave the Burmese government every
encouragement possible.
US Ambassador to Asean David L. Carden said: “I have every confidence
Myanmar will be a leading contributor to Asean integration, including
economic integration. We are pleased to see the government and private
sector are focused on the road ahead and that other Asean member states
are showing strong support.”
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