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Allow fleeing Rohingyas to seek shelter in Bangladesh: UN

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Allow fleeing Rohingyas to seek shelter in Bangladesh: UN
UNB . Dhaka | Update: 17:34, Aug 29, 2017
Read more: UNHCR seeks open borders for people fleeing Rakhine

This latest round of violence comes after the attacks on Myanmar security forces on 25 August.

The UN secretary general, who condemned those attacks, reiterated the importance of addressing the root causes of the violence and the responsibility of the government of Myanmar to provide security and assistance to those in need, according to the statement issued on Myanmar a copy of which UNB obtained.

“Many of those fleeing are women and children, some of whom are wounded,” said the spokesperson.

The UN chief called for humanitarian agencies to be granted unfettered and free access to affected communities in need of assistance and protection.
http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/157933/Allow-fleeing-Rohingyas-to-seek-shelter-in
 
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12:00 AM, August 30, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:29 AM, August 30, 2017
UN worried
UN chief calls for giving Rohingyas security, assistance; UNHCR urges Bangladesh to open border
Staff Correspondent
Expressing deep concern at reports of the killing of civilians in security operations in Rakhine State, UN Secretary-General António Guterres has reiterated Myanmar's responsibility to provide security and assistance to those in need.

He has also appealed to the Bangladesh authorities to open the borders for the Rohingyas fleeing violence.

The latest round of violence, which erupted after Rohingya insurgents attacked Myanmar security forces on August 25, prompted thousands of Rohingyas to leave home in fear of their lives and seek safety in Bangladesh.

Earlier, 87,000 Rohingyas were displaced during a ferocious military crackdown in response to insurgent attacks in October last year, reports Reuters.

According to an UNHCR estimate, some 5,200 Rohingyas had entered Bangladesh since the latest violence. Several thousand more were reported to be stranded at different points along the Myanmar border.


Against such a backdrop, Guterres urged the Myanmar authorities to grant humanitarian agencies unfettered and free access to the affected communities.

He noted that the UN stands ready to provide all necessary support to both Myanmar and Bangladesh in this regard.

Meanwhile, New York-based Human Rights Watch reported of widespread burnings in at least 10 areas in northern parts of Rakhine.

“This new satellite data should cause concern and prompt action by donors and UN agencies to urge the Burmese government to reveal the extent of ongoing destruction in Rakhine State,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of the HRW.

The UN Refugee Agency said the situation in Rakhine was "dramatically worsening" and it was concerned about the precarious situation in Myanmar.

"We are concerned that the number of people needing help may rise further over the coming days."

The UNHCR said it was aware of several reported instances of people being prevented from entering Bangladesh. "This poses very grave risk to the individuals affected."

The agency said it communicated its readiness to support Bangladesh in helping the refugees fleeing Myanmar. At the same time, it also called upon the international community to support Bangladesh in doing so, with all necessary aid and other help.

Voicing concern at incitement to further violence in Rakhine, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein urged all sides to renounce the use of violence.

“I utterly condemn the violent attacks on security personnel, which have led to the loss of many lives and the displacement of thousands of people,” Zeid said in a statement.

“Unfortunately, what we feared appears to be occurring. Decades of persistent and systematic human rights violations, including the very violent security responses to the attacks since October 2016, have almost certainly contributed to the nurturing of violent extremism, with everyone ultimately losing.

“This turn of events is deplorable. It was predicted and could have been prevented.”

Zeid also expressed worries about claims by Myanmar State Counsellor's Office that international aid workers were complicit in or supporting the attacks.

“Such statements are irresponsible and only serve to increase fears and the potential for further violence.”

“I am extremely concerned that the unsupported allegations against international aid organisations place their staff in danger and may make it impossible for them to deliver essential aid,” he said.

The UN high commissioner further said the perpetrators of the attacks on security personnel must be brought to justice as must those who have been attacking the civilian population. All this must occur with full respect for international human rights law.

"State authorities should issue clear instructions to security forces to refrain from using disproportionate force, minimise damage and injuries and respect the right to life. Those who use excessive force must be held accountable.

“The State has a duty to protect those within its territory -- without discrimination,” Zeid added.

In the meantime, at a meeting with visiting senior US diplomat Alice Wells at state guesthouse Padma in the morning, Foreign Minister AH Mahmood Ali sought US support to resolve the Rohingya crisis.

Wells, acting assistant secretary of state for south and central Asian affairs, termed the current situation in Myanmar "quite concerning".

HRW STATEMENT

The HRW yesterday said satellites initially detected active fires in the early afternoon of August 25 in the village tracts of Zay Di Pyin and Koe Tan Kauk in Rathedaung.

On August 28, satellites located fires in another eight locations from mid-morning to early afternoon, including in Maungdaw town and several other villages in Maungdaw Township.

It compared the locations of these fires with witness statements and media reports, and found a correlation with some reported incidents where residences have allegedly been deliberately burned.

The HRW noted that the information bears a close resemblance to that found during widespread arson attacks in Rakhine State during violence against the Rohingyas in 2012 and 2016.

The Myanmar government and army blame Rohingya residents and militants for the burning of some structures, but thus far have not presented evidence to support their allegations, the HRW mentioned.

It demanded that the Myanmar government grant access to independent monitors to determine the sources of fire and assess allegations of human rights violations.

HRW Deputy Asia Director Phil Robertson said, “Shuffling all the blame on insurgents doesn't spare the Burmese government from its international obligations to stop abuses and investigate alleged violations.”

Yesterday, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said they were preparing to receive people fleeing fighting in Myanmar.

"Thailand's defence ministry and security are preparing to receive various displaced people," he told reporters.

He noted that the Thai authorities would send them back "when they are ready".

He, however, didn't say if any Rohingya from Myanmar arrived since the recent violence, reported AFP.

Earlier on Monday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged the international community to step up efforts to help the Rohingyas, saying the world was “blind and deaf” to their plight.

He described the latest flight of the refugees towards Bangladesh as an "extremely painful event" and vowed to take up the issue at the UN General Assembly next month.

http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/un-worried-1456006
 
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The Annan Report on Rohingyas and fresh extremism fears
Afsan Chowdhury, August 30, 2017
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Ethnic Rohingya refugees from Myanmar gather on a boat as they are being rescued by Thai Navy officers before they head to Malaysia, at the Andaman coast, Phuket island, southern Thailand, 29 January 2013. Photo: Metro.co

The Annan report commissioned by the UN didn’t impress Myanmar authorities much. Immediately in its wake came a series of clashes in the Rakhine state leaving scores dead and a fresh surge of refugees to Bangladesh. Myanmar officials reported that Rohingya militants had attacked outposts and their forces had responded. Although Aung San Suu Kyi had promised to abide by the findings of the UN report, Myanmar didn’t seem to be listening.

While Rohingayas, considered the most “helpless’ among stateless people in the world remain a humanitarian crisis the Annan report has also mentioned the fear that ‘extremism’ may escalate as a reaction to the crisis.

The approximately 1.1 million Rohingya have multiple identities and form an ideal combination to generate violent extremism. They have land, ethnic and religious identity in one plate which makes an ideal mixture to mount a terrorist threat.

“Unless current challenges are addressed promptly, further radicalisation within both communities is a real risk,” the nine-member commission final report said. “If the legitimate grievances of local populations are ignored, they will become more vulnerable to recruitment by extremists. The population remains politically and economically marginalised and may provide fertile ground for radicalisation, as local communities may become increasingly vulnerable to recruitment by extremists”.

Meanwhile Myanmar’s domestic investigation team criticized the UN report and rejected allegations of abuses.

More refugees and Bangladesh reaction
Bangladesh has experienced three major problems as a result of the influx. Housing and feeding the refugees which though partly externally funded is the biggest one. Plans are on to shift them to an island though it faces resistance from several quarters. Second, the rise of cross border crime particularly the yaba drugs trade in which powerful politicians are now involved and it contributes to domestic crime and social instability. And third is the fear of radical extremists rising in the camps and spilling over to Bangladesh mainland from the borders with drug trade profit funding.

Bangladesh’s own internal “Islamic terrorism” threat is very much under control and many identified militants are in custody with no major attack in the last one year. Since public support is high, bumping off militants has not been a constraint. However, the militants in Bangladesh are all local and cross-border terrorism would be another matter altogether.

Sources within the Bangladesh government have said that they don’t expect much of a response from the Myanmar government on the UN report and feel they are at a receiving and unfair end of the crisis. It thinks that no pressure has been put on the Myanmar government and Western powers are not interested in what Bangladesh is going through as the investment potential in Myanmar is high for them.

Bangladesh has proposed joint patrolling of the borders but it doesn’t seem to realize that the Myanmar army does want to get rid of the Rohingyas and in this move it enjoys great public support.

Regional terrorism and China’s enlarged role
Rohingyas first arrived as refugees in 1977 but returned after a UN brokered deal in 1978. In 1991, around quarter million refugees fled to Bangladesh. From 1992 to 1997, another peace deal saw most of them return home. In 2012, many began to arrive again and militant groups began to attack Myanmar forces. In 2016 conflicts increased and the army retaliated sending thousands more to Bangladesh. Militant groups such as Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), formerly known as Harakah al-Yaqin are usually blamed for such attacks and such attacks are now more common.

When the Rakhines arrived in the early 1991, Middle Eastern powers were very active and reports of Pakistani spook agencies running training camps were common. Later such reports declined after the Awami League came to power and the refugee problem lessened.

In 2012, Bangladesh refused to allow the refugees to land arguing that Jamaat and other Islamists were active among them. However, the sheer physical impossibility has made the stoppage policy redundant and half-hearted attempts are at best what are happening now. Bangladesh is also not prepared to handle violent extremism either should that increase.

Western powers may not mind localized extremist activities as its happening now but activities in mainland Myanmar beyond the Rakhine state will be difficult to blink away. If the military cracks down further in the Rakhine area, sanctuary for extremists will be the Bangladesh border area and camps. So, pressures may grow on Bangladesh to carry out combing operations. But public sympathy is with Rohingyas hence the political cost for such actions will be too high for BD law enforcers.

If extremism increases, Bangladesh may be able to make a better case for the countries with clout in Myanmar to put pressure on that government to reduce violence against the Rohingyas, any action against the Rohingyas may also lead to retaliation from the extremists against mainland Bangladesh targets. And that is why the government will be very reluctant to act against them. And the chances of a section of law enforcers — possibly rogue — as well as Bangladeshis extremists helping out the Rohingya militants is not impossible.

Bangladesh has not done a great job in drawing international attention to the issue and failed to interest even the Muslim countries let alone China, the largest regional power with a stake in Myanmar to act. With India sending back its refugees and washing its hands off the crisis, China may be forced to play a bigger role in regional diplomacy to sustain its status in South Asia. If China wants to be the “neighbor of South Asia”, it may have to play a bigger role in inter-country conflict management than its playing now.
http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/08/30/annan-report-rohingyas-fresh-extremism-fears/
 
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VIOLENCE AGAINST ROHINGYAS
An open letter to Mr Kofi Annan
by Habib Siddiqui | Published: 00:05, Aug 29,2017
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People walk through the overcrowded Kutapalong refugee camp. — Allison Joyce/Koan Collective

DEAR Mr. Annan,

I am very disappointed with your statement, dated August 25, 2017, concerning the latest violence in the Rakhine state of Myanmar. You stated, ‘I am saddened to hear of the loss of life of members of the security forces. The alleged scale and gravity of these attacks mark a worrying escalation of violence. No cause can justify such brutality and senseless killing. Perpetrators should be held to account.’
From the first sentence of that paragraph, it is not difficult to understand where your sympathy lies.

It is, sadly, with the Myanmar government that sponsored your Commission and its criminal perpetrators — the Myanmar security forces and surely not with the Rohingya victims who should have deserved such. You equivocated when it was necessary to take the moral high ground and to call a spade a spade. I am very worried that such mixed messaging will only justify the on-going genocidal crimes against the Rohingyas, much like what happened in Rwanda that you continue to regret for happening under your watch as the UN chief.

Has not history taught us all that violence is the last resort of an oppressed community when all pleas and other non-violent means for stopping violence directed against it have been ignored or shut down by the oppressor? And even then, the so-called violence of the oppressed against the much better armed, equipped and financed oppressor is motivated by the single factor: defending or protecting its own community. It would be gross misjudgement to equate their struggle for self-defense with the extermination campaign of the more powerful oppressor.

I am sorry to observe that you have been misinformed.

It is an irony that the victims of the genocide — the Rohingyas — are now framed as the ones in the wrong side because of their alleged attacks on Myanmar security forces this past week or back in October of last year. Forgotten in that calculus are decades of genocidal crimes of the successive military regimes since the days of General Ne Win that were to continue full-blown to this very date under Suu Kyi’s government.

Overlooked in that context is the mere fact that being denied citizenship simply because of its racial and religious identity more than half the Rohingya population has been forced out of its ancestral land in Arakan (Rakhine state). Ignored also are the facts that Myanmar epitomises apartheid policy in our time and flouts the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by denying such rights to the Rohingya people. As a matter of fact, when it comes to the Rohingya — rightly recognised by the United Nations (that you once led) as the ‘most persecuted people’ in our planet — not even one of the thirty rights (Articles) enshrined in the UDHR is honoured by the Apartheid Myanmar.

I would like to believe that as the chairperson of the Advisory Commission on Rakhine State, you know that the Burmese military (Tatmadaw — long known as the Rapist Burmese Army) has been building its troops in Rohingya areas of northern Arakan since August 10, effectively blockading those areas and terrorising the already marginalised community. Under the name of interrogation, hundreds of Rohingya men and boys were taken away by military from the IDP camps. They were tortured and many were killed while Rohingya women left behind were raped as a weapon of war to ethnically cleanse them.

Their homes were torched, too. The UN and Human Rights Watch, amongst many human rights groups, all were asking the Myanmar military to back off but to no avail.

The latest episodes of atrocities perpetrated by the military resulted in fresh influx of thousands of Rohingyas into Bangladesh. That is despite stepped-up patrols by Bangladeshi border and coast guards, who last week had pushed back a boat carrying 31 Rohingya, including children. The Balukhali camp (in Cox’s Bazar of Bangladesh) alone saw new arrivals of some 3,000 Rohingya refugees in the last few days. And, all these happened days before the alleged attack by the Rohingya ‘insurgents’ against Rakhine police.

As I write this letter, per credible reports, on August 25, in the early AM hours 25 Rohingya villages were bombed by Burmese military reportedly using six gunship helicopters, navy ships and tanks as Rohingyas were sleeping in the middle of the night. It is feared that hundreds of Rohingyas have been slaughtered and more than a thousand homes set on fire on Friday making tens of thousands of Rohingyas homeless because of the latest military action.

When life on earth has become unbearable and worse than death for the oppressed Rohingya is it difficult to fathom why some would ‘radicalise’ and choose to fight back — and justifiably so — with whatever means available? Now the criminal Burmese military claims that 59 ‘insurgents’ and 12 soldiers were killed after Thursday midnight. They say that ‘insurgents’ were armed with machetes. As you know too well, farmers use machetes, ‘insurgents’ don’t.

No one would disagree with you that violence is not the solution and that exercising restraint is important to avoid further escalation. However, the ball is in the military’s court and it is they who need to be restrained from harming the Rohingya people. Truly, if our world leaders had the moral fortitude these war criminals would have been tried long time ago in the International Criminal Court for their decades of crimes against humanity — which by no means were limited to the Rohingyas alone but also to other ethnic minorities that have been fighting for their survival. It would be sensible to reflect that for the last 40 plus years Rohingyas have been peacefully asking for the restoration of their citizenship and other rights whereas the other ethnic groups, non-Bamar Buddhists and Christian, in Myanmar are fighting the government with guns.

Suu Kyi and her brutal military have been too cunning for too long to deflect international pressure. Bluntly put, the Advisory Commission on Rakhine State that you chaired was one such window-dressing attempt by the Myanmar government to ease pressures from the international community and humanise the hideous face of Myanmarism that has contributed to so much human suffering: the destruction of tens of thousands of homes, businesses, schools and mosques, the encampment of some 140,000 Rohingyas in the concentration-like IDP camps, widespread rape of women, let alone the forced exodus of nearly 87,000 to neighbouring Bangladesh, since 2012 alone.

According to the UN, 52 per cent of the women they surveyed in refugee camps in Bangladesh were raped by the Tadmadaw. Seventy percent of these 87,000 refugees are women and children since men are either killed or imprisoned.

Suu Kyi’s government won’t even allow any international investigation team to visit the troubled Rakhine state and inquire about serious charges of war crimes perpetrated by the government security forces — all committed in cahoots with ever growing fascist elements within the broader Buddhist society that see no place for religious minorities to live inside Myanmar.

Mr Annan, you have admitted in your own report of the Advisory Commission on Rakhine State that she formed ‘a national entity and the majority of its members are from Myanmar’. Its mandate did not allow the use of the term ‘Rohingya’ in accordance with the wishes of Ms Suu Kyi. In spite of such obstacles you faced, I am glad that the report you submitted is a milestone for the Rohingya by calling for lifting restrictions on movement and citizenship for its persecuted Rohingya minority if Myanmar wants to avoid fuelling ‘extremism’ and bring peace to the Rakhine state.

Suu Kyi, sadly, has never been sincere to resolving the Rohingya problem. She has denied their very existence and has been widely condemned by all quarters, including fellow Nobel Laureates.
Did you ever ponder about why the so-called insurgency of the Rohingya, who had hitherto, by all accounts, been the most non-violent minority, happened just shortly after your appointment as the chair to the commission and also within hours of submission of your final report this week? Who benefits from such violence, and who loses?

It is the Rohingya that loses the game played in such an uneven playing field. It is the Myanmar government and its Tatmadaw that win. They never wanted a peaceful solution to the decades-long problem, which they had initiated. And they don’t want to implement the recommendations you have put forth in your commission report either. So, they planned, moved to the Rohingya areas, cordoned off and committed war crimes to trigger off the latest episode blaming once again their victims to justify their on-going atrocities under the pretext of being attacked by the insurgents. The violence that they unleashed this week and before are all part of a very sinister long-term strategy to ethnically cleanse minority Rohingyas. It was no accident and did not happen in vacuum!

Your commission report rightly noted that if human rights were not respected and ‘the population remain politically and economically marginalised, northern Rakhine State may provide fertile ground for radicalisation, as local communities may become increasingly vulnerable to recruitment by extremists’. ‘While Myanmar has every right to defend its own territory, a highly militarised response is unlikely to bring peace to the area,’ the report also said.

The perpetrators of violence are the Myanmar security forces who should be held to account. They have failed to heed to your recommendations, and won’t be sobered by mixed messaging coming from world dignitaries like you. It is high time to try these brutes and savages in the International Criminal Court to save humanity, failing which I am afraid, Mr Annan, we may see the end of Rohingya community in the den of intolerance called Myanmar. She remains the last vestige of an apartheid state in our time.

On March 26, 2004, you stated with respect to Rwanda genocide, ‘If the United Nations, government officials, the international media and other observers had paid more attention to the gathering signs of disaster, and taken timely action, it might have been averted. Warnings were missed.’

Sir, there is no excuse this time. There is no ‘guilt of sin of omission’ within us. Ms Yanghee Lee, the United Nations special rapporteur, has warned us; the international media, Human Rights Watch, Fortify Rights, Amnesty International and other observers have all warned us repeatedly about the Rohingya catastrophe. It needs a leader like you to stop their extinction. In this regard, remember that genocide is a process and not an outcome. Stop it when it is not late.

Please, be forceful in condemning Myanmarism and its viciousness that have caused so much human suffering in our time. If it is not you, who will? The lessons from Rwanda should make you better prepared to stop this slow-burning genocide that the minority Rohingyas are facing today. Help them to survive and live as equal citizens in Myanmar. Please, take the lead in this noble cause.
Thanking you for reading my letter.
Kind regards,
(Dr.) Habib Siddiqui
Philadelphia, USA

Dr Habib Siddiqui is a peace and rights activist.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/22978/an-open-letter-to-mr-kofi-annan
 
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Myanmar - The World’s Most Silent Genocide
AUGUST 29 ,2017
BY CJ WERLEMAN
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It is the world’s most silent genocide. So silent, in fact, that even in the unlikely event you have heard about it, it’s more than likely you know only its foggiest details.

Under the UN Geneva Convention, the definition of genocide describes both a mental and physical element: “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such,” and includes killing members of the group; Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

In every sense of the definition, the government of Myanmar is carrying out genocide against its 1.3 million Rohingya Muslim population – one that is being ignored, in the most part, by the international community, despite acknowledgement by the United Nations that mass killings, disappearances, torture, gang rapes, brutal beatings, property dispossession, and forced deportations are occurring in increasing frequency and ferocity.

The UN’s 2017 report into Myanmar’s savage “crackdown” on the country’s northern Rakhine state described the violence as likely “crimes against humanity,” and that “the gravity and scale of these allegations begs the robust reaction of the international community,” but the international community, particularly Western leaders and media continues to ignore Myanmar’s systematic extermination of Rohingya Muslims.

“The devastating cruelty to which these Rohingya children have been subjected is unbearable – what kind of hatred could make a man stab a baby crying out for his mother's milk. And for the mother to witness this murder while she is being gang-raped by the very security forces who should be protecting her,” saidUN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein.
The cruelty inflicted upon these people by the state obligated to protect their security is on a par with the level of depraved barbarism carried out by the self-proclaimed Islamic State, but whereas the terrorist group’s psychopathic violence attracts global headlines, the cruelty mete out by Myanmar’s security forces goes largely unknown.

Cruelty that includes the slaughter of babies and young children with knives; deliberate destruction of food supplies, and the burning and looting of entire villages. Of 101 Rohingya Muslim women interviewed by the UN, more than half said they had been raped or sexually assaulted.

Sattar Islam Nirob is a 28-year-old Rohingya Muslim refugee in one of the three refugee camps set up inside the Bangladesh border. He and his family have taken refuge in Kutapalong refugee camps, which now holds 13,766 Rohingya Muslim refugees alongside another more than 65,000 held in a neighboring “make shift camp,” Nirob told me.

Nirob said that fresh assaults carried out by Myanmar’s security forces are pushing a rapidly increasing number of Rohingya Muslims towards the Bangladeshi border. Yesterday he estimated there to be more than 3000 waiting, more like pleading, for refugee status, while he estimated a further 1,200 had been arrested by Bangladeshi border patrol officers for trying to cross without a permit.

Yesterday, Bangladeshi security forces forcibly sent back 90 Rohingya Muslims trying to flee Myanmar, and then began firing mortars and machine guns at them, according to Al Jazeera.

But even when the “fortunate” few of the likely hundreds of thousands of internally displaced Rohingya Muslims make it safely into neighboring Bangladesh, the refugee camps that await them can only be described as horrific.

He described to me conditions inside Kutapalong camp; breaking down in tears as he recounted witnessing babies starving and dehydrating to death due to a lack of water and emergency milk supplies. Others have described pathways “paved with sewage,” and a “claustrophobic crush of mud huts and tents packed so tightly together that they looked like they were built on top of each other.” This has been Nirob’s home for the past two years. Too afraid to return to Myanmar in the knowledge he’d face certain death, torture, or imprisonment.

When I asked Nirob if he felt his situation was hopeless, he said he had not abandoned hope in the international community, saying, “If the US government and United Nations can work together to pressure the Myanmar government, it will greatly improve the situation for all Rohingya refugees.”

Despite Nirob’s continued optimism in the face of such indescribable adversary, efforts to pressure Myanmar’s de facto leader, San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize recipient, have fallen short. Not only has she blocked the UN from investigating Myanmar’s human rights violations, but also she maligned Rohingya Muslims as “terrorists” and/or supporters of terrorism.

Clearly, the international community must do more to halt Myanmar’s systematic extermination and expulsion of Rohingya Muslims. To do nothing is to provide the Muslim world of yet another clear example of the West’s refusal to intervene when Muslim lives are endangered.

CJ Werleman is a journalist, political commentator, and author of 'The New Atheist Threat: the Dangerous Rise of Secular Extremists.

https://ahtribune.com/human-rights/1868-rakhine-genocide.html
 
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Bangla bhai,

The Rohingyas are doomed. Burmese govt doesnt have to bother about world opinion. They can count on the support of the world's emerging superpower - Pakistan's taller than mountain friend- to bail them out.

Regards
 
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Turkey dispatching Relief Materials for Rohingayas
রোহিঙ্গাদের জন্য বাংলাদেশে ত্রাণ পাঠাচ্ছে তুরস্ক

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রোহিঙ্গাদের জন্য বাংলাদেশে ত্রাণ পাঠাচ্ছে তুরস্কr
বাংলাদেশে আশ্রয়প্রাপ্ত রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থীদের জন্য অতি দ্রুত ত্রাণ পাঠাচ্ছে তুরস্কের মানবিক ত্রাণ সংস্থা (IHH)।

তুর্কি ত্রাণ সংস্থার এক বিবৃতিতে বলা হয়েছে, মিয়ানমারের আরাকান রাজ্যের সংখ্যাগরিষ্ঠ হাজার হাজার মুসলিম নারী-পুরুষ বার্মিজ সেনাবাহিনীর ব্যাপক ধ্বংসযজ্ঞের কারণে বাংলাদেশ সীমান্তে আশ্রয় নিতে বাধ্য হয়েছে।

বিবৃতিতে বলা হয়েছে, তুর্কি ত্রাণ সংস্থা বাংলাদেশে আশ্রয় নেওয়া এক হাজার আরকান মুসলিম পরিবারের জন্য ত্রাণ পৌছিয়ে দিয়েছে।
ত্রাণ সংস্থা পরিবারের জন্য খাদ্যজাত দ্রব্য পাঠিয়েছে। এরমধ্যে রয়েছে প্রত্যেক পরিবারের জন্য ২০ কেজি চাল, ২ কেজি ডাল, ২ কেজি আটা, ২ কেজি লবণ, এছাড়াও রয়েছে ভোজ্য তেল। পাশাপাশি প্রত্যেক পরিবারকে নগদ ১৫ ডলার দেয়া হবে।

বিবৃতিতে আরো বলা হয়, ত্রাণ সংস্থা শরণার্থীদের জন্য নিত্যপ্রয়োজনীয় জিনিসের কোটি তালিকা তৈরী করেছে। যাতে রয়েছে, খাদ্যজাত দ্রব্য, ঔষুধ, কলা, শিশু খাবার এবং পোশাক।

বিবৃতিতে আরো বলা হয়েছে, প্রায় ৭০০ এর অধিক ঘরবাড়ি, মসজিদ, কুরআন শিক্ষা প্রতিষ্ঠান এবং স্কুল-মাদ্রাসা আগুন দিয়ে জালিয়ে দেয়া হয়েছে।

http://rtnews24.net/international/76755
 
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Thousands of Rohingyas Fleeing Violence Are Stranded on the Bangladesh-Myanmar Border
By Rezwan on August 29, 2017
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The Stateless @Thestateless1
Over a thousand #Rohingya crossed the border into #Bangladesh after #MyanmarArmy launched atrocious campaign against the civilians.

The violence threatens the already precarious situation of the Rohingyas in Myanmar. The government of Buddhist-majority Myanmar doesn’t recognize the Rohingya people as among the country’s ethnic groups and denies them citizenship. Authorities and Buddhist nationalists consider them to be illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, even though the Rohingyas have roots in the Rakhine state that go back centuries.

Rohingyas are often subjected to racial and religious slurs, including being called “Bengalis.” It’s for these reasons they are often described as the “most persecuted minority group in Asia.”

The majority of Rohingyas are non-violent, but a group calling itself Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army took up arms late last year. In October 2016, its armed militants attacked several border police posts, leaving nine police personnel dead. Myanmar forces retaliated by killing dozens of “alleged insurgents” and the counter-insurgency operation saw reports of wide-scale human rights violations on the part of the army, including incidents of extrajudicial murder, gang rapes, arson, and infanticide.

After the recent round of fighting broke out, thousands of Rohingya fled their villages and gathered near the Bangladesh border as gun shots could be heard from the Myanmar side. A Rohingya Facebook page claimed that the Myanmar military conducted air attacks in northern Maungdaw, shooting villagers from helicopters. Videos were circulated on social media showing villages burning, Rohingya refugees fleeing and dead bodies on the river.
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#Myanmar military at the border shot fire #Rohingya, who areabout to cross #Bangladesh to escape killing by military and extremists #Rakhine
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#Myanmar military at the border shot fire #Rohingya, who are about to cross #Bangladesh to escape killing by military and extremists #Rakhine

Myanmar citizens also expressed concern for Rakhine’s ethnic majority who were exposed to the violence. However, some took it a step further and blamed the entire Rohingya community for the attacks against the security outposts.

Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who is the State Counsellor of Myanmar and whose party is now the head of Myanmar’s government, has attracted criticism for failing to stop the persecution of the Rohingya.

She, in turn, has accused international aid workers of helping the violent militants. According to reports, Suu Kyi’s administration is trying to restrict access to Rakhine for aid groups and the media while publicly discrediting them. Several aid workers have been seen leaving the area already.

Phil Robertson, the deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, condemned on Twitter the statement of against aid groups:
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Phil Robertson @Reaproy
Profoundly irresponsible for Aung San Suu Kyi to accuse int'l #NGOs of involvement in "terrorist" attacks in #Rakhine without any evidence!
Bangladesh, home to 400,000 Rohingyas, begins turning refugees away:
Bangladesh remains the only country which has repeatedly agreed to allow Rohingya refugees inside its borders. The refugees are sheltered in temporary camps and are surviving with the help of aid and donations from authorities and the local people. The World Food Programme and other local NGOs have pledged food and emergency medical aid support.
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Catastrophe & hunger in No Man's land. #Rohingya kids without food. Babies not breastfed. Agencies not given access. http://www.arakantv.com/bn/?p=2701

But on August 26, Bangladesh declared that they will not allow any more refugees from Myanmar, citing that the country already hosts about 400,000 Rohingyas. The government maintains that as Bangladesh is overpopulated with little or no form of social security for its own citizens, it simply is not in the position to host refugees indefinitely. It added that the influx of refugees has already caused “massive” social, economic and environmental problems.

The Bangladesh government started to push back hundreds of Rohingyas into Myanmar, putting them further in danger.
DIPQ7L-XkAAGSFw.jpg:small

Shafiur Rahman @shafiur
BD Border Guard deploys 15k more troops to push back #Rohingya & respond to Burmese army firing into no man's land https://goo.gl/mAABdT
This article originally appeared at www.globalvoices.org.
http://www.intobserver.com/thousand...re-stranded-on-the-bangladesh-myanmar-border/
 
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BD should let them in. There are times when economic national interest is subservient to moral national interest.

This is one such times. Rohingyas are being killed, they should be let in, there can be no argument against this.

BD soul and morality as a nation can not stand if we allow ethnic cleansing on our border.
 
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Villains of circumstance
Rubaiyat Kabir
Published at 07:24 PM August 30, 2017
Last updated at 12:46 AM August 31, 2017
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Waiting on the world puts lives at stake REUTERS
By doing nothing, the world risks turning the Rohingya situation into something much worse
Oppression comes in many sizes and shapes.

In fact, if we go by the current definition of the word being hollered about by Western progressives, the examples would include things such as using the wrong pronouns to refer to someone of some gender or another.

Oppression, it appears, is in the eye of the beholder.

Perhaps. But I doubt anyone would disagree when I say that there is nothing “eye of the beholder” about what the Rohingya are going through in their own homeland right now. With the way the Myanmar army is cracking down on the hapless minority group, their actions can be called nothing short of an ethnic cleansing.

Subjective oppression be damned, when there’s an objective genocide in the offing.

Better-informed fellows than I have already said whatever needs to be said regarding the sheer insanity that is going on in the Rakhine State — about how toothless the UN has been in doing anything about it, about how Aung San Suu Kyi possibly took Bono’s advice to “Walk On” a little too seriously.

There’s been little in the way of anything new to shed light on … up until now, of course.

A little less than a year ago, the pogrom seemed to have been just that — a one-sided battering of a minority ethnic group at the hands of a military junta. But the Myanmar army’s ceaseless attempt at an ethnic cleansing is now witnessing the closest thing to a push-back.

While it remains to be seen exactly how genuine militant group Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army’s claims of being an army fighting for the salvation of the Rohingya are (nomenclature can only go so far, I’m afraid), the trouble they have stirred along the borders and elsewhere leave little scope for justification.

If the Myanmar government is to be believed, apparently the militant group has been deploying child soldiers in the recent spate of violence that was sparked in the Rakhine State. Exactly what kind of salvation requires a child to bear arms?

But, of course, it’s the government’s word against the insurgents’ — a group that is, curiously, being led by a bloke who has a history with the Taliban, I might add.

No one ever chooses to be radicalised, it’s only when the chips are down that picking up a gun and raising hell starts to make more sense than waiting for the world to finally say ‘enough is enough’

But is anyone surprised? No one ever chooses to be radicalised, it’s only when the chips are down that picking up a gun and raising hell starts to make more sense than waiting for the world to finally say “enough is enough.”

And we, Bangladesh, were supposed to be a part of that collective.

There’s no denying that our country has done its fair share in helping these persecuted people — even though that help basically equates to unhooking a fish from a line and throwing it onto a desert island shore — but our government’s recent proposal of a joint operation with Myanmar in “dealing” with the insurgency is disappointing at best and worrisome at worst, since an influx of radicalised refugees helps neither country.

High on their recent victories over Islamists on our own soil, our leaders seem to have lost sight of what exactly it means to be a people oppressed by its own state.

The Rohingya, the ones that are not calling for bloody revolution, have done nothing to deserve this fate. Stuck between a state that would rather see them dead than call them countrymen and bloodthirsty Islamists to whom they are nothing more than canon fodder for their crusade, they face becoming the villains because of circumstances they had no part in influencing.

But what can anyone do? Diplomacy has obviously failed miserably, and pleading to Ms Suu Kyi’s sense of self awareness seems to be a fool’s errand. Could a potential answer lie in (whisper it with me now) “intervention”?

Sure wouldn’t be the first time in the history of the world.

Rubaiyat Kabir is an Editorial Assistant at the Dhaka Tribune. He can be followed on Twitter @moreanik.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/opinion/2017/08/30/villains-of-circumstance/

05:50 PM, August 28, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 06:01 PM, August 28, 2017
Give shelter to Rohingyas, Khaleda to govt
khaleda_94.jpg

BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia on August 28, 2017, calls upon the government to provide shelter and security to the Rohingyas who are being forced to flee fresh escalation of violence in Rakhine State of Myanmar. Star file photo
Star Online Report

BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia today called upon the government to provide shelter and security to the Rohingyas who are being forced to flee fresh escalation of violence in Rakhine State of Myanmar.

“I am urging the government and its authorities concerned to provide shelter and security to the Rohingyas who have intruded into Bangladesh for the sake of their lives,” Khaleda made the call in a press statement today.

The former prime minister also called upon the government to take diplomatic initiatives to send back the Rohingyas after ensuring securities of their lives and properties.

Khaleda Zia also expressed her grave concern and condemnation over the riot carried out by the Myanmar security forces on Rohingyas that left many people killed.

“I believe that the Myanmar government would take immediate step to solve the Rohingya crisis showing respect to the equal dignity and heritage,” she added.
http://www.thedailystar.net/politic...ingyas-violence-rakhine-state-myanmar-1455328
 
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Iran is calling for an immediate end to violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.

In a letter to UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif expressed deep concern over the deplorable situation of the persecuted minority. He said the #Rohingya are subjected to violence and killing on a daily basis, and that many of them have been forced from their homes. Zarif reiterated that the mistreatment of Rohingya Muslims runs counter to the UN Charter and basic human rights. The top Iranian diplomat highlighted that the systematic violation of the Rohingya’s rights and stripping them of their right to citizenship will have grave consequences for peace and stability in Myanmar and neighboring countries as well. He said the U-N is expected to intervene and take prompt action to end the Rohingya’s plight.
By Press TV
#Myanmar #RakhineTerrorist #Rakhine #Buddhist #Muslims#Buddhistterrorist #RakhineState #AungSanSuuKyi
 
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Police NOT barring Rohingyas entering into Bangladesh
রোহিঙ্গাদের বাংলাদেশে ঢুকতে বাধা দিচ্ছে না পুলিশ
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ছবির কপিরাইট GETTY IMAGE
Image captionবাংলাদেশ-মিয়ানমার সীমান্ত

বাংলাদেশের দক্ষিণ-পূর্ব সীমান্তে মিয়ানমার থেকে পালিয়ে আসা রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমদের ঢুকতে না দেবার সরকারি আদেশ থাকলেও তা উপেক্ষা করছে পুলিশ।

কক্সবাজার থেকে বিবিসির সংবাদদাতা জানাচ্ছেন, মিয়ানমারের রাখাইন প্রদেশে সহিংসতা থেকে প্রাণ বাঁচাতে প্রতিদিনই আরো বেশি করে রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিম সীমান্ত পেরিয়ে বাংলাদেশে ঢুকছে। তবে বাংলাদেশের পুলিশ তাদের থামানোর কোন চেষ্টা করছে না।

জাতিসংঘের অনুমান অনুযায়ী এ পর্যন্ত ৫৮ হাজার শরণার্থী বাংলাদেশে ঢুকেছে।


অন্য আরো প্রায় ২০ হাজার লোক সীমান্ত এলাকায় নাফ নদীর তীর বরাবর আটকে আছে, এবং তারা পানিতে ডুবে যাওয়ার বা রোগ ও বিষাক্ত সাপের ঝুঁকিতে রয়েছে।

শরণার্থীরা অভিযোগ করছে, মিয়ানমারের নিরাপত্তা বাহিনী এবং বৌদ্ধ জনতা তাদের গ্রামগুলোয় আগুন লাগিয়ে দিচ্ছে।
তবে মিয়ানমারের সরকার বলছে, তাদের নিরাপত্তা বাহিনী গত মাসে ঘটা একটি আক্রমণের মোকাবিলা করছে - যাতে রোহিঙ্গা জঙ্গীদের হাতে ২০টি পুলিশ ফাঁড়ি আক্রান্ত হয়েছিল।

_97644349_130607010246_erdogan_returns_to_turkey_304x171_videocapture.jpg

Image caption তুর্কী প্রেসিডেন্ট এরদোয়ান

রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমদের ওপর গণহত্যা চালানো হচ্ছে: বললেন তুর্কি প্রেসিডেন্ট এরদোয়ান
তুরস্কের প্রেসিডেন্ট রেচেপ তায়েপ এরদোয়ান অভিযোগ করেছেন, মিয়ানমার সেদেশের সংখ্যালঘু রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমদের ওপর গণহত্যা চালাচ্ছে।

ইস্তাম্বুলে ঈদুল আজহা উপলক্ষে দেয়া এক বক্তৃতায় প্রেসিডেন্ট এরদোয়ান বলেন, "সেখানে গণহত্যা চলছে। যারা গণতন্ত্রের আবরণে এই গণহত্যার প্রতি চোখ বন্ধ করে আছে - তারা এর সহযোগী।"

মি এরদোয়ান বলেন তিনি এ মাসের শেষে জাতিসংঘের সাধারণ পরিষদে এ বিষয়টি তুলবেন। তিনি আরো বলেন, এ নিয়ে তিনি ইতিমধ্যেই জাতিসংঘের মহাসচিব ও অন্যান্য মুসলিম নেতাদের সাথে কথা বলেছেন।

বাংলাদেশের পররাষ্ট্র মন্ত্রণালয় এক বিবৃতিতে জানিয়েছে, বাংলাদেশের রাষ্ট্রপতি আবদুল হামিদের সাথেও কথা বলেছেন তুরস্কের প্রেসিডেন্টএরদোয়ান, এবং তিনি মিয়ানমারের রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমদের পরিস্থিতি নিয়ে গভীর উদ্বেগ প্রকাশ করেন এবং এ ব্যাপারে বাংলাদেশের নেয়া পদক্ষেপগুলোর প্রশংসা করেন।

মিয়ানমারের সামরিক বাহিনীর অফিস বলছে, রাখাইন রাজ্যের সহিংসতায় এ পর্যন্ত ৪০০ লোক নিহত হয়েছে - যার অধিকাংশই রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিম।

বিবিসি বাংলায় আরো পড়ুন:

নাফ নদীতে ভেসে উঠেছে ২৬টি লাশ
বাংলাদেশের আকাশসীমায় মিয়ানমারের হেলিকপ্টার
http://www.bbc.com/bengali/news-41135609?ocid=socialflow_facebook

21192305_1530962273613896_1152474414719187423_n.jpg
 
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Bangla bhai,

The Rohingyas are doomed. Burmese govt doesnt have to bother about world opinion. They can count on the support of the world's emerging superpower - Pakistan's taller than mountain friend- to bail them out.

Regards

Don't you Indians brag about having a larger Muslim population than Pakistan? You can't take in Afghans LOL and are taunting Pakistan for being an ally of China.
 
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BD should let them in. There are times when economic national interest is subservient to moral national interest.

This is one such times. Rohingyas are being killed, they should be let in, there can be no argument against this.

BD soul and morality as a nation can not stand if we allow ethnic cleansing on our border.

Not to mention that we were refugees once.
 
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1,091 Rohingyas pushed back amid tension in Rakhine state
Abdul Aziz, Cox's Bazar
Published at 06:44 PM September 02, 2017
BGB-stopping-Rohingyas-690x450.jpg

Rohingyas, who have been sent back, included women, children and elderly people
Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) members have pushed back some 1,091 Rohingyas who fled Rakhine state in the face of Myanmar security forces massive crackdown.

“They were sent back when they tried to trespass into Bangladesh by crossing the Naf River from early Saturday till the evening,” Teknaf BGB 2 Commander Lt Col SM Ariful Islam said.

Teknaf police station Officer-in-Charge Md Moin Uddin said the body of a Rohingya was recovered from the river.

Earlier on Friday, law enforcement agencies found 26 dead bodies of Rohingya people along the Naf river in Teknaf.

Rohingyas, who have been sent back, included women, children and elderly people.

In October last year, Rohingyas tried to intrude into Bangladesh in the same way after violent clashes broke out in Rakhine state.

This year, thousands of Rohingyas have already started gathering at Bangladesh border as fresh fighting erupted in Rakhine state between militants and security forces.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/uncateg...ngyas-pushed-back-amid-tension-rakhine-state/
 
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