Ramzy Baroud
Onislam.net
March 4, 2013
One fails to understand the unperturbed attitude with which regional and
international leaders and organizations are treating the unrelenting
onslaught against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, formally known as Burma.
Numbers speak of atrocities where every violent act is prelude to
greater violence and ethnic cleansing. Yet, western governments’
normalization with the Myanmar regime continues unabated, regional
leaders are as gutless as ever and even human rights organizations seem
compelled by habitual urges to issue statements lacking meaningful,
decisive and coordinated calls for action.
Meanwhile the ‘boat people’ remain on their own.
On February 26, fishermen discovered a rickety wooden boat floating
randomly at sea, nearly 25 kilometers (16 miles) off the coast of
Indonesia’s Northern Province of Aceh. The Associated Press and other
media reported there were 121 people on board including children who
were extremely weak, dehydrated and nearly starved.
They were Rohingya refugees who preferred to take their chances at sea
rather than stay in Myanmar. To understand the decision of a parent to
risk his child’s life in a tumultuous sea would require understanding
the greater risks awaiting them at home.
Endless Pains…
Reporting for Voice of America from Jakarta, Kate Lamb cited a moderate
estimate of the outcome of communal violence in the Arakan state, which
left hundreds of Rohingya Muslims dead, thousands of homes burnt and
nearly 115,000 displaced.
The number is likely to be higher at all fronts. Many fleeing Rohingya
perished at sea or disappeared to never be seen again. Harrowing stories
are told and reported of families separating and boats sunk. There are
documented events in which various regional navies and border police
sent back refugees after they successfully braved the deadly journey to
other countries - Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh and elsewhere.
The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) reported that nearly 13,000 Rohingya
refugees attempted to leave Myanmar on smugglers’ boats in the Bay of
Bengal in 2012. At least five hundred drowned.
But who are the Rohingya people?
Myanmar officials and media wish to simply see the Rohingyas as ‘illegal
Bengali immigrants’, a credulous reading of history at best.
The intentions of this inaccurate classification, however, are truly
sinister for it is meant to provide a legal clearance to forcefully
deport the Rohingya population. Myanmar President Then Sein had in fact
made an ‘offer’ to the UN last year that he was willing to send the
Rohingya people “to any other country willing to accept them.” The UN
declined.
Rohingya Muslims, however, are native to the state of “Rohang”,
officially known as Rakhine or Arakan. If one is to seek historical
accuracy, not only are the Rohingya people native to Myanmar, it was in
fact Burma that occupied Rakhine in the 1700’s. Over the years,
especially in the first half of the 20th century, the original
inhabitants of Arakan were joined by cheap or forced labor from Bengal
and India, who permanently settled there.
For decades, tension brewed between Buddhists and Muslims in the region.
Naturally, a majority backed by a military junta is likely to prevail
over a minority without any serious regional or international backers.
Without much balance of power to be mentioned, the Rohingya population
of Arakan, estimated at nearly 800,000, subsisted between the nightmare
of having no legal status (as they are still denied citizenship), little
or no rights and the occasional ethnic purges carried out by their
Buddhist neighbors with the support of their government, army and
police.
The worst of such violence in recent years took place between June and
October of last year. Buddhists also paid a heavy price for the clashes,
but the stateless Rohingyas, being isolated and defenseless, were the
ones to carry the heaviest death toll and destruction.
And just when ‘calm’ is reported – as in returning to the status quo of
utter discrimination and political alienation of the Rohingyas –
violence erupts once more, and every time the diameters of the conflict
grow bigger. In late February, an angry Buddhist mob attacked
non-Rohingya Muslim schools, shops and homes in the capital Rangoon,
regional and international media reported. The cause of the violence was
a rumor that the Muslim community is planning to build a mosque.
Spreading Danger
What is taking place in Arakan is most dangerous, not only because of
the magnitude of the atrocities and the perpetual suffering of the
Rohingya people, which are often described as the world’s most
persecuted people.
Other layers of danger also exist that threatens to widen the parameters
of the conflict throughout the Southeast Asia region, bringing
instability to already unstable border areas, and, of course, as was the
case recently, take the conflict from an ethnic one to a purely
religious one.
In a region of a unique mix of ethnicities and religions, the plight of
the Rohingyas could become the trigger that would set already fractious
parts of the region ablaze.
Although the plight of the Rohingya people have in recent months crossed
the line from the terrible, but hidden tragedy into a recurring media
topic, it is still facing many hurdles that must be overcome in order
for some action to be taken.
While the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has been making
major economic leaps forward, it remains politically ineffective, with
little interest in issues pertaining to human rights.
Under the guise of its commitment to ‘non-interference’ and
disproportionate attention to the festering territorial disputes in the
South China Sea, ASEAN seems unaware that the Rohingya people even
exist.
Worst, ASEAN leaders were reportedly in agreement that Myanmar should
chair their 2014 summit, as a reward for superficial reforms undertaken
by Rangoon to ease its political isolation and open up its market beyond
China and few other countries.
Meanwhile, western countries, led by the United States are clamoring to
divide the large Myanmar economic cake amongst themselves, and are
saying next to nothing about the current human rights records of
Rangoon. The minor democratic reforms in Myanmar seem, after all, a
pretext to allow the country back to western arms. And the race to
Rangoon has indeed begun, unhindered by the continued persecution of the
Rohingya people.
On February 26, Myanmar's President Sein met in Oslo with Norway's Prime
Minister Jens Stoltenberg in a ‘landmark’ visit. They spoke economy, of
course, for Myanmar has plenty to offer. And regarding the conflict in
Arakan, Jens Stoltenberg unambiguously declared it to be an internal
Burmese affair, reducing it to most belittling statements. In regards to
‘disagreements’ over citizenship, he said, “we have encouraged
dialogue, but we will not demand that Burma’s government give
citizenship to the Rohingyas.”
Moreover, to reward Sein for his supposedly bold democratic reforms,
Norway took the lead by waving off nearly have of its debt and other
countries followed suit, including Japan which dropped $3 billion last
year.
While one is used to official hypocrisy, whether by ASEAN or western
governments, many are still scratching their heads over the unforgivable
silence of democracy advocate and Noble Peace Prize recipient Aung San
Suu Kyi.
Luckily, others are speaking out. Bangladesh's Nobel laureate Muhammad
Yunus, along with former Timor-Leste president Ramos-Horta had both
recently spoke with decisive terms in support of the persecuted Rohingya
people.
“The minority Muslim Rohingya continue to suffer unspeakable
persecution, with more than 1,000 killed and hundreds of thousands
displaced from their homes just in recent months, apparently with the
complicity and protection of security forces,” the Nobel laureates wrote
in the Huffington Post on February 20.
They criticized the prejudicial Citizenship Law of 1982 and called for granting the Rohingya people full citizenship.
The perpetual suffering of the Rohingya people must end. They are
deserving of rights and dignity. They are weary of crossing unforgiving
seas and walking harsh terrains seeking mere survival.
More voices must join those who are speaking out in support of their
rights. ASEAN must break away from its silence and tediously guarded
policies and western countries must be confronted by their own civil
societies: no normalization with Rangoon when innocent men, women and
children are being burned alive in their own homes.
This injustice needs to be known to the world and serious, organized and
determined efforts must follow to bring the persecution of the Rohingya
people to an end.
Ramzy Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the
editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a
Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now
available on Amazon.com. Baroud's website can be visited here: www.ramzybaroud.net.
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