The ruthless and systematic policy of oppression practised by the military junta in Myanmar (formerly Burma) for the last nearly half a century against an ethnic minority of more than 1.4 million Muslims has been one of the darkest episodes of ethnic discrimination in contemporary times. Concealing this crime was easy because the regime, one of the most totalitarian and brutal, has been isolated from the world. It not only resorted to a carefully orchestrated campaign of oppression against the Rohingyas but also went a step further — it questioned the Rohingya’s right of community citizenship and denied their right to be called nationals of Myanmar because it asserted, without any documented evidence, that all Rohingya have entered the country illegally. That is a bizarre rationale which does not rest on any plausible foundation because the minority Muslims have been living in the country since ages. Their ancestors converted to Islam when Muslim traders came to the region in the 7th and 8th century and continued to interact with the indigenous Burmese population.
The military junta have no grounds to unleash a reign of terror upon a helpless and peaceful community. The state repression has taken many forms. Employment is denied to the Rohingya community in a country where the government happens to be the main employer. Restrictions are in place on the movement of the community not only internally but also on their travels abroad. Systematic and consistent attacks on their villages continue.
What is most distressing is that the police and the army, quite unashamedly, take part in the brutal attacks on the poor Rohingya Muslims. There are no state institutions like schools or hospitals in the areas inhabited by the Rohingya. They are forced either not to seek education for their children or beg Buddhist teachers to secretly allow their children to enter schools. Even the monks — otherwise peace-loving and peaceful religious leaders have been spearheading attacks against Muslims. Hundreds of Rohingyas have been killed in the last five years as the genocide campaign picked momentum, while thousands have been made to escape to the unwelcoming lands of Bangladesh. Dozens have perished and drowned in the rivers while trying to escape to Bangladesh as they were pursued by relentless gangs of attackers including military personnel.
The peace icon and Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi disappointed many of her admirers beyond Myanmar when she failed to raise her voice in defence of citizens of her country who were being massacred and whose properties, villages and markets were being systematically burnt and destroyed via state sponsored acts of terrorism. Few voices have been raised either in the neighbourhood of Myanmar or in the wider international community against the regime’s policy of pursuing a genocidal campaign against Rohingya Muslims. Perhaps, this attitude of the Islamic or regional countries have emboldened the military junta to inflict more pain and misery on the poor ethnic Muslims.
Indeed, the issue is not of ethnic discrimination alone. It is fundamentally an issue of suppression of human rights; it is an issue of crimes against humanity.
At a time when the world is keen to embrace Myanmar after half a century of isolation because of the brutal record of oppression by the military junta, it will be tragic for a country of 60 million to be universally condemned for the continuance of the genocidal policies that have, in the last four years, forced more than 150,000 ethnic Rohingyas to flee the country of their ancestors. The world should wait and see whether the advent of a new era of liberalisation and guided democracy will also deliver some relief to the long persecuted Rohingya or whether the military junta will continue to call the shots and drive the country into an unending spiral of ethnic strife.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 3rd, 2014.
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COMMENTS (37)
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@qadri - "The responsible people from Media and representatives of Muslim and World embassies should taken action on the hatred and racial discrimination against Rohingyas as cruelty is to be stopped effectively no matter it is committed by any cruel regime. "
Else they should take the Rohingyas into their own countries.
yes as pointed somewhere in the comments above, why not ask Saudi to accept them in saudi arabia
height of hypocrisy
what about the plight of Shia muslims in Pakistan and the plight of the Agakhani muslims in pakistan
pehlay apnay angan main pari lashon ka khayal kijiye Mr Taliban Representative, baad main doosron per ungli uthaye
There is no easy solution. From my brief visit to Myanmar last September as a Tourist I observed that anti-muslim sentiment was strong in one area I visited. I regretted having started the conversation. However, let us not forget the Muslim record. Turkey 'cleansed' of almost all the Christians (who were in Constantinople for a millenia) and in 1915 committed genocide against the Armenians. At one time there were 500 churches in Istanbul and now less than 30 remain. Hagia Sophia is an example of Byzantine Church; and minarets were erected to convert it into a mosque. Egypt has done similar activities. There is a huge migration of Coptic Christians from Egypt. Pakistan does not have a good record either, even for minority Muslim communities. Pakistan does not even want to help its Bihari citizens stranded in Bangladesh. May be the Muslim countries should set up an organization to retake and settle the 'oppressed' Muslims and settle them in the Holy land of Oil-rich Saudi Arabia or any Islamic country, instead of appealing to the secular countries, mostly Western ones, to assist them.
@Someone: I think you should ask whether the Muslims of India are willing to relocated to Pakistan and you will be shocked at your claims that Pakistan was created for Muslims.All of them will reject Pakistan .Why even he urdu speaking Muslims who migrated after fighting for Pantsuit are now 'MOHAJJIRS' the unwanted.At least in India Muslims are still called muslims and not 'mohajjirs' are some such name.If you are so concerned by the plight of rohingyas,Pakistan should offer asylum and rehabilitation,for eg in Kashmir or Baluchistan and see what happens to them.They will be bombed and killed! The last thing Pakistan can write about is on Human rights which is only in the dictionary as far Pakistan is concerned.
@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan:
" How sad that India has murdered more Muslims than Burma, yet we remain silent on both. "
If you really care about the truth, it is not India or Burma that have killed "more" Muslims. It is Pakistan that has killed more Muslims than any other country. Three million fellow Pakistanis in East Pakistan, most of them Bengali Muslims, were butchered by the Pakistani state.
@Someone:
"let’s go a step further and discuss the plight of the Muslims in India, many of whom live in equivalent, if not worse, conditions in the secular Hindu sham of a republic that we call India. "
Very noble thoughts indeed. If you are really serious about the "plight" of Indian muslims who are suffering untold agony in India, why not ask Pakistan to open its doors to these suffering brethren? After all, Pakistan was created to save ALL of Indian muslims from Hindu tyranny.
Seeing these comments by our Hindu residents, I realize now the way these Burmese monks and their mobs think. How sad that India has murdered more Muslims than Burma, yet we remain silent on both. Rest assured, God will judge all.
Look under your own sleeves....same things happening in Pakistan...will you fight for Ahmadi's, Hindu, Christian rights?
No way...Maulvis will not let you...so cry on Rohingya.
Mr. Rustam Shah, Please focus on peace talk with monster to calm them down otherwise they will devour your nation without any burp.
India and israeli democracies are shame on earth....
@Someone: If what you say is true, they would have migrated to Pakistan en masse - like the Hindus in Pakistan are doing right now. Try again good man.
They migrated . End of story @chandran:
@Someone:
Last time I checked, Burma wasn't an "international migraine"
@Someone
"All the comments here by Indians are an example of shameless bigotry. Drawing parallels between an international outcast (Burma) with Pakistan or for that matter any other country shows the lack of intellectual capacity in their understanding of the Rohingya crisis."
LMAOROF. Burma is international Pariah and Pakistan is not? People write LOL just to tease others. But I am literally LingOL!!!
"But now that the fire has been cast, let’s go a step further and discuss the plight of the Muslims in India, many of whom live in equivalent, if not worse, conditions in the secular Hindu sham of a republic that we call India. People living in glass houses should not throw stones at others, and India is a rather fragile glass house."
First stone is cast by the writer of this article. I guess you don't get the concept for 'casting the first stone'.
All the comments here by Indians are an example of shameless bigotry. Drawing parallels between an international outcast (Burma) with Pakistan or for that matter any other country shows the lack of intellectual capacity in their understanding of the Rohingya crisis.
But now that the fire has been cast, let's go a step further and discuss the plight of the Muslims in India, many of whom live in equivalent, if not worse, conditions in the secular Hindu sham of a republic that we call India. People living in glass houses should not throw stones at others, and India is a rather fragile glass house.
I know how these rohingyas feel fleeing their land. My ancestors were kicked out by Muslims from Rawalpindi and Gujranwala in 1947. Poor people. Rab rakha
Why doesn't Pakistan offer asylum for these Rohingya Muslisms instead of just shedding crocodile tears? But, first start with the repatriation of the urdu speaking Pakistanis in Bangdladesh who have been living in horrible refugee camps for the past four dedades.
Really Indians? You're gonna troll on an article about genocide? That's pretty pathetic honestly. ET I know you care about the Indians' feeling but you have to respect my right to freedom of speech too...
Respected Sir,
You are worrying about the Muslim population in Burma but what about Hindu population in Pakistan and how it has been reduced from 15% to 2% in due time.
Just change the ethnicities and rest of the article remains the same. 1]1970-------"Bengalis" 2]2005------"Balochis"
What about the persecuted communities in Pakistan.You have not written article for them. Please make peace in your country. Only then you are eligible to take tension for others.
Can you pls talk / write about Uighur muslim discriminitation / extermination by China? WIll make you leader of UMMAH- Try Once ;)
@Rustam Shah
"It is pathetic how the world and the regional countries have shown such inexplicable indifference to the unending suffering of the Rohingya — the Muslim minority of Myanmar and according to the UN, the ‘most persecuted ethnic community in the world’."
What a shameless bigotry by the writer.
Nobody cares about Muslims, you know why? When was the last time, Muslims cared about anybody?
You Muslims don't even care about your own people. Look at your own country how your own extremists are killing your own people.
When did you write about the plight of Shia majority of Bahrain or iraq under Saddam? When did you care about the violation of all sorts of human rights in Saudi Arabia? When did you care about the plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka?
Well Sir, how about the persecution of minorities in your own country? Any qualms on that, before you comment on others?
Well they have a choice to convert to the religion of the majority, like Pakistan insists with its minorities. Pakistan should show its spine in taking a principled stand, as it is the only nation created for islam and grant assylum to the Rohingyas.
A very important topic, and one that definitely needs more important. It is important that Pakistan, and other countries of the world, particularly the neighbours of Burma/Myamnar and those investing in Burma/Myanmar, use their influence on the government and get them to stop this repression of a defenceless minority. From the UN to Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, Doctors without borders, and many others have documented a plethora of systematic human rights abuses conducted by the regime.
Irrelevant to Pakistanis.
Rustam sahab,
appreciate your comments on plight of rohingyas. pls also shed some light on plight of muslims in your own country too who remain victims of terror from religious fanatics. you mentioned "It is fundamentally an issue of suppression of human rights; it is an issue of crimes against humanity." Would you mind applying the same when you advocate peace with those who continue to suppress human rights in our tribal areas, suppress girl education there and what not? who kill those who doesnt agree with them.
Sir, the irony is, you speak of it only because they are Muslim.
I hope rohingyas are sent back to pakistan and other muslim countries where they can live safely . Saudi should take them.
Not unlink the Hindu population of present day Pakistan who had to flee their homeland to India for no fault of their own other than having a name that didn't sound similar to that of the author.
I wonder if Pakistan is willing to pay reparations for this community or create a separate state in Sindh for Hindus that once used to live in this area. The new country can be called "freedomstan" for it will be free from Sharia law.
As we speak, these very same Rohingya are fleeing into India illegally by the droves, since Bangladesh refuses to allow them entry.