April 15, 2013
Laura Bashraheel
JEDDAH – Secretary-General of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation
(OIC) Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu Sunday warned against widening of the circle
of violence against Muslims in Myanmar to neighboring areas, in
reference to the outbreak of violence committed by Buddhist extremists
against Muslims in Sri Lanka.
In his speech at the emergency OIC Contact Group meeting on Rohingya
Muslim minority, Ihsanoglu reiterated that the violence against Muslims
in Myanmar was unacceptable and should not continue. “Such violence is a
clear indication of the government’s negative approach in dealing with
ethnic and religious tensions that erupted last summer,” he said.
Ihsanoglu called on member states of the Contact Group to take action
through communication with the international community to implement
recommendations of the OIC Islamic Summit held in Makkah. He also
suggested requesting OIC member states which are members in the Contact
Group and which have diplomatic missions in Myanmar to use their good
offices to put this issue forward, expressing readiness of the OIC to
continue coordination and render necessary support to improve the
conditions of Muslims in Myanmar until they regain all their legitimate
rights.
“Despite our attempts to establish communication with the authorities in
Myanmar by selecting a prominent figure from a neighboring country to
visit Myanmar and open discussions with officials, the government was
not responsive,” Ihsanogle said.
He told Saudi Gazette that the OIC will ask the United Nations Human
Rights Council to send fact-finding mission to investigate all human
rights violations in Myanmar.
Wakar Uddin, Director-General of Arakan Rohingya Union (ARU), the voice
of Rohingya for political and human rights in Myanmar, said that they
are hoping to draw the attention of Muslim countries and OIC members to
the worsening situation in Myanmar and Arakan state.
“This is no longer a Rohingya issue, it’s becoming an Islamic issue
because the radical elements in Myanmar are trying to eliminate Islam
from the country,” he said.
According to Uddin, among all the refugees around the world, Saudi
Arabia is the only country giving residency to over 500,000 Burmese
refugees.
Malaysia is also trying to give the Rohingyas a better status as also
Pakistan, which has more than 400, 000 refugees. “We have some
challenges in Banagladesh and we are working with Indonesia. In Thailand
some of them are in the camps but we are trying to work it through,” he
added. “The most important thing we are trying to reach is basically
end the violence.
Myanmar government is very clever in maneuvering. So every time pressure
is put on them, they try to say positive things and ease the pressure
and things go back to being violent,” Uddin said.
According to reports from the UN, Human Rights Watch and underground
Rohingyas, the recent violence which erupted on the March 20 has
resulted in the burning of 37 mosques, 77 shops, 1474 houses.
Last year at least 180 people were killed in the western state of
Rakhine in clashes between local Buddhists and Rohingya – a Muslim
minority treated with hostility by most Burmese who see them as illegal
Bangladeshi immigrants.
In March, at least 43 people died in Buddhist-Muslim clashes which broke in central Myanmar.
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