Some 89 people have been killed in clashes between Buddhist Rakhines and Muslim Rohingyas in western Myanmar in the past 10 days, according to the latest official toll.
"This situation must not become an opportunity to permanently remove an unwelcome community," said a joint statement issued by Tomas Ojea Quintana, UN special rapporteur on Myanmar, and independent experts on minority issues and the internally displaced.
They voiced their "deep concern about the assertion of the government and others that the Rohingya are illegal immigrants and stateless persons".
"If the country is to be successful in the process of democratic transition, it must be bold in addressing the human rights challenges that exist," Ojea Quintana said.
"In the case of Rakhine State, this involves addressing the long-standing endemic discrimination against the Rohingya community that exists within sections of local and national government as well as society at large."
The Rohingyas say their homes were burned down by Rakhines armed with slingshots, wooden staves, knives and gasoline.
The United Nations says more than 97 per cent of the 28,108 people who have fled the violence are Muslims, mostly stateless Rohingya. Many now live in camps, joining 75,000 mostly Rohingya displaced in June after a previous explosion of sectarian violence killed at least 80 people.
Fearful Buddhists and Muslims are arming themselves with homemade weapons, testing the reformist government's resolve to prevent a new wave of violence.
Rita Izsak, UN independent expert on minority issues, said the Rohingya constituted a minority which must be protected according to international minority rights standards.
"The government must take steps to review relevant laws and procedures to provide equal access by the Rohingya community to citizenship and promote dialogue and reconciliation between communities," she said.
The UN refugee agency has called on authorities to restore law and order so as to prevent further bloodshed and displacement. An estimated 6,000 people are stranded on boats or on islets along Myanmar's western coast, it said on Tuesday.
"We are appealing to neighboring countries, Bangladesh being very much one of them, to keep borders open. It is clearly important that people do have access to safe haven," UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards told a news briefing on Tuesday.
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..And they say Muslims are extremists!
Waiting on the Tribune to call UN a conspiracy theorist over-exaggerating the Burmanese massacre. (:
Dear UN ,
Kindly notice the injustice & all the Blasphemy law here in Pakistan & even how we treat the non Muslims here , Please take notice here tooo
Brute majority carrying out brutal acts against the minority anywhere in the world needs to be condemned by all mankind. One must put oneself in the shoes of the minority and feel the grave threat to life & liberty of self & family members to understand the trauma they must be undergoing. TRAGIC INDEED. One additional thought - How come the UN or anyone never bothered about the massacre of Kashmiri Hindus by the majority Muslims? Even today they live in pathetic conditions as refugees in their own country.
Let Burmese understand that transition to Democracy is pointless if it is accompanied with blackmail by those who won't take the burden themselves. Stand your ground, Burma! Let those who do not tire preaching about human rights on the backs of others pick up the burden themselves instead of shoving it on poor Burma. Even Bangladesh refuses to let those stateless people in and for good reasons. If Burma relents now, it will be a cancer it will never get rid of. And it will continue to come back off and on. Learn from India. Time to resolve it is now.