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Global outcry grows louder

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2:00 AM, September 09, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 05:24 AM, September 09, 2017
Global outcry grows louder

US leaders join chorus of condemnation; it's difficult situation for Bangladesh, says State Dept spokesperson; protests in different countries
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Rohingyas, mostly women and children, huddle under makeshift shelters in the rain. Photo: Anisur Rahman
Star Report

International outcry over the atrocities against Rohingyas is growing with politicians, rights activists and Nobel laureates castigating the Myanmar government, as an estimated 2,70,000 of the persecuted community have sought refuge in Bangladesh over the past two weeks.
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Many are slamming Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar's de facto leader, for failing to condemn the violence against the minority group of her country, leaving her global reputation as an icon of democracy in tatters.

US lawmakers who once strongly backed her rise to power are shifting their position to criticism of her silence in the face of a bloody military crackdown on the Rohingyas.

Congressional leaders from both Democrat and Republican parties have added their voices to the international condemnation, reports The Washington Post.

The Trump administration is under growing pressure from Congress and human rights activists to condemn brutalities on Rohingyas. However, neither the White House nor the State Department has yet to come out any such statement, writes Politico.

Activists in the US say only direct messages from Trump or Secretary of State Rex Tillerson are likely to influence Myanmar's repressive military and save civilian lives.

A senior official of the US State Department, however, said Myanmar should respond responsibly to attacks on security forces in Rakhine State, respecting rule of law and human rights.
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An old man tells of his sufferings in Myanmar. Photo: Anisur Rahman
Patrick Murphy, deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asia, told reporters that Washington saw shortcomings on the part of the security forces and the government in dealing with the situation in Rakhine and was pushing for urgent restoration of access for humanitarian assistance and journalists there.

"Security forces, in fact, need to be there to protect civilian populations and to address the threats posed to the governing structure," he told reporters yesterday.

"At the same time, they have a responsibility to carry out those activities in accordance with rule of law and international human rights."
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A man carrying his father walks to an unregistered camp. Photo: Anisur Rahman
Besides, during a State Department press briefing Thursday afternoon, spokeswoman Heather Nauert insisted that the Trump administration cares about the crisis.

"We urge all in Myanmar to avoid actions that exacerbate tensions there," she said.

Nauert also said, “The United States is working through the United Nations and other international organisations to assist tens of thousands of civilians who have fled to southeastern Bangladesh since August 25.

“We are also communicating with Burma's neighbours and other concerned international partners on efforts to end the violence and assist affected communities there.”

Replying to a question, she said, “I know it is a difficult situation for Bangladesh, as it is for any country, to absorb refugees. We have provided -- I believe it's about $55 million this year in -- to Burmese refugees not only in Burma, but I believe also in Bangladesh. If I have anything more for you on that, I'll get that to you.”
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A woman shelters herself from rain under a plastic sheet. Photo: Anisur Rahman
SENATE RESOLUTION
Also on Thursday, two top US Senators -- Dick Durbin and John McCain -- introduced a resolution condemning the “horrific acts of violence” against the Rohingya, and calling upon Suu Kyi to live up to her historic democratic and human rights ideals by taking action to stop this humanitarian tragedy.

Co-sponsored by US Senators Dianne Feinstein, Cory Booker and Bob Menendez, they issued a joint resolution strongly condemning the violence against and displacement of Rohingya civilians and calling for an immediate halt to all hostilities by Myanmar's authorities.

The Senate resolution also calls upon Myanmar to allow the United Nations “unrestricted access” to assess the situation and provide aid, and to end legal restrictions on citizenship and freedom of movement for the Rohingya.

Also condemning the attacks by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army militant group, the resolution called for the implementation of the recommendations of Kofi Annan Commission.

Other senators, including Benjamin L Cardin and Cory Gardner have also expressed similar concerns.

On Wednesday, US House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce in a letter to Myanmar State Counsellor Suu Kyi said: “Your government and the military have a responsibility to protect all of the people of Myanmar, regardless of their ethnic background or religious beliefs. These atrocities, the latest and most severe against this minority group, must end.”

The Washington Post wrote that the outcry in Congress reflects the dismay and confusion of the stoic group of Suu Kyi's supporters in Washington that nurtured her throughout her more than 15 years under house arrest.

Suu Kyi's unwillingness to speak out against the military crackdown, which came in response to insurgent attacks in Rakhine State on August 25, has prompted some former admirers to suggest that she be stripped of the Nobel Peace Prize she won in 1991.

Calling for international response, Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, meanwhile, said the global community needs to intervene to protect the Myanmarese minority group.

She also urged fellow Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi to speak up for the Rohingya, BBC reported yesterday.

Earlier, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, another Nobel Prize winner, told his "dearly beloved younger sister" Suu Kyi that "the images we are seeing of the suffering of the Rohingya fill us with pain and dread".

Yesterday, rights groups held a briefing for UN Security Council diplomats on the Myanmar violence. Russia and China did not send any diplomats, according to people at the meeting.

Myanmar has said it was counting on China and Russia to protect it from any Security Council censure, reports Reuters.

In Malaysia, several hundred protesters rallied outside the Myanmar Embassy, urging Kuala Lumpur to sever diplomatic ties with Naypyidaw.

Besides, its maritime agency chief said the country's coast guards will not turn away Rohingyas fleeing violence in Myanmar and is willing to provide them temporary shelter, reports Reuters.

Meanwhile, the two-day World Parliamentary Forum on Sustainable Development, held in Indonesia from Wednesday, expressed deep concern over ongoing violence in the Rakhine State.

The “Bali Declaration” adopted by the Forum urged everyone to “exercise maximum self-restraint from using violent means, respect the human rights of all people in Rakhine state regardless of their faith and ethnicity, as well as facilitate and guarantee safe access for humanitarian assistance”.

Amid reports of atrocities against the minority group of Myanmar, an estimated 2,70,000 Rohingyas have fled to Bangladesh in last two weeks alone, UNHCR said yesterday.

Bangladesh is struggling to cope with the latest influx, which takes the number of Rohingya refugees in camps near its border with Myanmar to around 6,70,000.

Of these, nearly 3,57,000 -- a third of Myanmar's total Rohingya population -- have left since October when the latest upsurge in violence began, writes AFP.

A top Bangladeshi diplomat in Dhaka told The Daily Star that they have information about brutal killings of at least 3,000 civilian Rohingyas during the military crackdown in Rakhine.

On the basis of witness testimonies and the pattern of previous outbreaks of violence, Yanghee Lee, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, said, "Perhaps about a thousand or more are already dead".

"This might be from both sides but it would be heavily concentrated on the Rohingya population."
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A five-month pregnant Hindu woman, whose husband was killed in Myanmar, is consoled by her aunt. The photos were taken in Kutupalang area of Cox's Bazar's Ukhia upazila yesterday. Photo: Anisur Rahman
NORWAY DEEPLY CONCERNED
Norway's foreign minister Borge Brende called on Suu Kyi and her government to allow humanitarian groups to distribute aid in Rakhine state, deeming limits on their work “extremely serious.”

On Wednesday, the minister said that the Norwegian government is deeply concerned about escalating violence and the deteriorating humanitarian situation of the Rohingya.

He said “all groups must show restraint,” but stressed that “authorities, under the leadership of Aung San Suu Kyi, have a particular responsibility to protect civilians from abuses, to stop the violence and to ensure humanitarian access.”

In a separate statement, Norway's Refugee Council said “full and unimpeded access to affected communities” is needed.

Earlier, Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland and Minister of International Development and La Francophonie Marie-Claude Bibeau in a statement on September 1 strongly condemned the escalating violence -- and its impact on innocent people -- in northern Rakhine State.

They said Canada encourages Myanmar to take measures to facilitate the continued delivery of humanitarian assistance.

'ETHNIC CLEANSING'
Human Rights Watch said the United Nations Security Council should hold a public emergency meeting and warn the Myanmar authorities that they will face severe sanctions unless they put an end to the brutal campaign against the Rohingya.

“The United Nations and concerned governments need to press Burma right now to end these horrific abuses against the Rohingya as a first step toward restoring Rohingya to their homes,” Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said.

Rohingyas fleeing security forces in Rakhine State have described killings, shelling, and arson in their villages that have all the hallmarks of a campaign of “ethnic cleansing,” according to a press statement of HRW yesterday.

PAKISTAN CABINET RESOLUTION
The Federal Cabinet of Pakistan on Thursday passed a resolution against Myanmar calling upon Suu Kyi to take immediate steps to stop the atrocities being committed in Myanmar.

The resolution also urged the United Nations to take the lead in stopping the “genocide of Rohingyas” in Myanmar.
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/global-outcry-grows-louder-1459495
 
PAKISTAN CABINET RESOLUTION
The Federal Cabinet of Pakistan on Thursday passed a resolution against Myanmar calling upon Suu Kyi to take immediate steps to stop the atrocities being committed in Myanmar.

The resolution also urged the United Nations to take the lead in stopping the “genocide of Rohingyas” in Myanmar.

BD Parliament or Cabinet is far from condemning the atrocities committed by Myanmar. BD govt is in a rice purchase promotion to that country. Some Gadha Bangladeshi govt representative is visiting there with a smiling face.
 
The Guardian view on the slaughter in Myanmar: a crime against humanity
Editorial
The brutal, bloody, and ultimately pointless mistreatment of a Muslim minority shames Aung San Suu Kyi
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Smoke billows above what is believed to be a burning village in Rakhine state as Rohingya take shelter in a no-man’s land between Bangladesh and Myanmar. Photograph: KM Asad/AFP/Getty Image
Monday 4 September 2017 19.30 BST Last modified on Monday 4 September 2017 22.59 BST

The Rohingya are a Muslim people living in the north-west of predominantly Buddhist Myanmar, which borders mainly Muslim Bangladesh. In Myanmar they are seen as Muslims, and in Bangladesh as foreigners. Neither country claims or even wants them. Neither will allow them citizenship, though these families have lived in Burma for centuries at least. Now the military in Myanmar will not even tolerate their existence, and in recent weeks the almost genocidal pressure on their villages has greatly increased, sending tens of thousands trying to flee across a guarded border into an uncertain future. The army appears to be trying to starve out the population from areas where the armed resistance is most active, sending an unprecedented flood of refugees across the border. It has blocked UN agencies from delivering food, water or medicine to the affected areas, leaving an estimated 250,000 people without regular access to food.

There is very little for the refugees if they do get out alive. The Bangladeshi authorities are extremely reluctant to recognise that they are fleeing from persecution, even if local people have responded with great generosity.

For years Myanmar government forces have descended on villages to slaughter or drive out their inhabitants. Amnesty International has accused the regime of crimes against humanity. One of Myanmar’s most influential Buddhist preachers, Ashin Wirathu, preaches compassion towards mosquitoes but death for Muslims. Although he has served time in prison for earlier sermons, he is now more popular than ever, and widely believed to have the support of the army, which ruled the country openly for years and is still a powerful force behind the scenes.

The persecution has, predictably, led to an armed resistance, which, just as predictably, has provoked greater repression and cruelty. The Buddha had something to say about such chains of violence and revenge but it appears that the Myanmar’s Buddhists would rather use chains as weapons, the way Hells Angels did, than be freed from them. This story would be tragic and an outrage to the conscience of the world if it ended there. But there is every chance it will not. There is no repression savage enough to empty the whole of Rakhine state of its inhabitants and finally crush the resistance. Neither can the armed resistance movement hope for any final victory. But it can hope to enlarge the scope of the conflict, and present it as a religious one in which Muslims are being persecuted for their faith.

That is at least half true, but it is a destructive as well as a powerful narrative. It adds Myanmar to the long list of countries where Islam appears to be the religion of the persecuted and the outcast, and to frame the justification for their own violent and intolerant revenge. There are already insurgencies of that sort – all of them building on existing ethnic divides and antagonisms – in many parts of south-east Asia, from Thailand to the Philippines.

There is a horrible irony in the involvement here of Aung San Suu Kyi, who appeared to be bringing to Myanmar the message of universal human rights – which would transcend or at least set limits to the brutalities of the old world. The Nobel prize winner, who appeared for decades as the epitome of principled and unflinching defence of human rights, now appears as the unfeeling figurehead of a vicious regime.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...n-the-slaughter-in-myanmar-a-against-humanity
 
US begins to sour on Suu Kyi amid mounting ethnic violence in Myanmar
Tribune Desk
Published at 05:49 PM September 08, 2017
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A house is seen on fire in Gawduthar village, Maungdaw township, in the north of Rakhine state, Myanmar September 7, 2017REUTERS
The Senate resolution calls on the Myanmar government to allow the United Nations unrestricted access to assess the situation and provide aid, and to end legal restrictions on citizenship and freedom of movement for the Rohingyas
The US lawmakers who once enthusiastically supported Aung San Suu Kyi’s rise to power in Myanmar have shifted this week to criticism of her silence in the face of a bloody military crackdown on ethnic minorities, the latest sign that the nation’s fragile democratic project is on tenuous footing.

Congressional leaders from both parties are adding their voices to the international condemnation of the violence in western Myanmar that has sent an estimated 270,000 Rohingyas fleeing to Bangladesh and led to growing doubts about Suu Kyi’s leadership.

On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators – Democrats Richard J Durbin, Dianne Feinstein and Cory Booker, and Republican John McCain – issued a joint resolution condemning the “horrific acts of violence” against the Rohingya and imploring Suu Kyi “to play an active role in ending this humanitarian tragedy.”

Suu Kyi, a longtime democratic icon who plays the role of state counsellor to the ruling National League for Democracy, has remained largely silent about the mounting humanitarian crisis. The outcry in Congress reflects the dismay and confusion of the stoic group of Suu Kyi’s supporters in Washington that nurtured her throughout her more than 15 years under house arrest and protected her interests as her country emerged from military dictatorship to hold largely democratic elections in November 2015.

Her unwillingness to speak out against the military crackdown, which came in response to insurgent attacks in Rakhine State, has prompted some former admirers to suggest that Suu Kyi be stripped of the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded in 1991.

“Part of this is the fault of the international community,” said Erin Murphy, a former State Department adviser who accompanied then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the country in 2011. Murphy said she thinks Suu Kyi is being unfairly maligned because supporters had unrealistic expectations.

“We told her story for 25 years, and we don’t like who she actually is,” Murphy said. “She does not have any idea how to handle this.”

The Senate resolution calls on the Myanmar government to allow the United Nations “unrestricted access” to assess the situation and provide aid, and to end legal restrictions on citizenship and freedom of movement for the Rohingya. It also calls on Suu Kyi to “live up to her inspiring words” and to “address the historic and brutal repression of the Rohingya.”

Other senators, including Benjamin L Cardin and Cory Gardner, have expressed similar concerns this week.

Former US president Barack Obama made Myanmar a centrepiece of his administration’s foreign policy in Asia, viewing the nation of 53 million as a bulwark against neighbouring China’s rising influence. Obama made two trips to the country, and last year his administration lifted the remaining economic sanctions, including on the import of jade and rubies.

President Donald Trump, by contrast, does not appear to have spoken with Suu Kyi, who skipped a roundtable meeting of Southeast Asian leaders with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in May because of scheduling conflicts.

“Part of the problem is that there is not the kind of strong interest in the White House as there used to be,” said Derek Mitchell, who was US ambassador to Myanmar from 2012 to 2016.

Trump administration officials did not respond to requests for comment.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/s...uu-kyi-amid-mounting-ethnic-violence-myanmar/
 
157 British MPs urge to suspend UK training of Burma`s army
Sunday, September 10, 2017
By Agency

Boris Johnson has been urged by 157 MPs and peers to suspend Britain's training of the Burmese armed forces given the military offensive against Rohingya Muslim civilians in the south-east Asian nation.

The Foreign Secretary has already warned Burma's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi that the treatment of the ethnic minority group is "besmirching" the country's reputation. The parliamentarians welcomed his statement but urged the Government to suspend British training of the Burmese military, which cost the UK around £305,000 last year, given reports of beheadings, rape and children being deliberately shot.

Answers to written parliamentary questions show that the UK does not provide combat training but instead seeks to educate soldiers in democracy, leadership and the English language.

In November last year, then-defence minister Mike Penning said the Government does not know if any of the soldiers trained by the UK are involved in operations against Rohingya Muslims, and said officials have not evaluated how the training has led to improvements in human rights.

The letter came after the United Nations said 270,000 Rohingya Muslims had crossed into neighbouring Bangladesh in the past two weeks.

The exodus began after Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts in Burma, prompting the military to respond with "clearance operations" to root out fighters hiding in villages in Rakhine state, prompting accusations of ethnic cleansing.
 
157 British MPs urge to suspend UK training of Burma`s army
Sunday, September 10, 2017
By Agency

Boris Johnson has been urged by 157 MPs and peers to suspend Britain's training of the Burmese armed forces given the military offensive against Rohingya Muslim civilians in the south-east Asian nation.

The Foreign Secretary has already warned Burma's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi that the treatment of the ethnic minority group is "besmirching" the country's reputation. The parliamentarians welcomed his statement but urged the Government to suspend British training of the Burmese military, which cost the UK around £305,000 last year, given reports of beheadings, rape and children being deliberately shot.

Answers to written parliamentary questions show that the UK does not provide combat training but instead seeks to educate soldiers in democracy, leadership and the English language.

In November last year, then-defence minister Mike Penning said the Government does not know if any of the soldiers trained by the UK are involved in operations against Rohingya Muslims, and said officials have not evaluated how the training has led to improvements in human rights.

The letter came after the United Nations said 270,000 Rohingya Muslims had crossed into neighbouring Bangladesh in the past two weeks.

The exodus began after Rohingya insurgents attacked police posts in Burma, prompting the military to respond with "clearance operations" to root out fighters hiding in villages in Rakhine state, prompting accusations of ethnic cleansing.
Western and Muslim world still maintain some sort of moral compulsion.Others are sold out to their petty selfish interest.
 
Critics circle Aung San Suu Kyi over Rohingya crisis
World leaders, NGOs and fellow peace prize winners speak out over Aung San Suu Kyi's response to the Rohingya crisis.
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Aung San Suu Kyi claimed the Rohingya situation was being twisted by a 'huge iceberg of misinformation' [Soe Zeya Tun/Reuters]
Myanmar's Nobel Peace Prize winning Aung San Suu Kyi is facing intense scrutiny over her response to the plight of her nation's Rohingya population.

Almost 300,000 Rohingya have fled into neighbouring Bangladesh, according to the UN, since renewed violence between state security forces and the minority group began more than two weeks ago.
MORE ABOUT THE ROHINGYA CRISIS:
Who are the Rohingya Muslims?
'My name is Jashim, I am Rohingya'
Opinion: Aung San Suu Kyi does not deserve the Nobel Peace Prize
Opinion: Only the international community can save Rohingya now

The disruption started on August 25 after Rohingya fighters attacked police posts in Rakhine, on Myanmar's (formerly Burma) western coast, triggering a military crackdown.

Aung San Suu Kyi, the nation's state counsellor and de facto leader, claimed this week that the situation is being twisted by a "huge iceberg of misinformation".

"We make sure that all the people in our country are entitled to protection of their rights as well as, the right to, not just political but social and humanitarian defence", she reportedly told Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a phone call on September 5.

The Rohingya, frequently described as "the world's most persecuted minority", are a mostly Muslim ethnic group, who have lived in majority Buddhist Myanmar for centuries.

There are currently around 1.1m residents in the Southeast Asian nation, which is home to more than 100 ethnic groups and approximately 55 million people.

A number of high-profile individuals have publicly criticised Aung San Suu Kyi, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for her campaign supporting democracy in Myanmar, in light of the crisis.

However, not all world leaders have been united in condemning Aung San Suu Kyi.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, for example, has refused to speak out and has instead offered his support to her.

"We share your concerns about extremist violence in Rakhine state and especially the violence against security forces," he said during a state visit to Myanmar on September 6.

More than 400,000 people have signed an online petition calling for Aung San Suu Kyi to be stripped of her accolade, accusing her of doing "virtually nothing to stop this crime against humanity in her country".

"The... [prize is] only to be given to 'people who have given their utmost to international brotherhood and sisterhood.' These peaceful values need to be nurtured by the laureates of the Nobel Peace Prize, including Aung San Suu Kyi, until their last days," the change.org petition reads.

"When a laureate cannot maintain peace, then for the sake of peace itself the prize needs to be returned or confiscated by the Nobel Peace Prize Committee."

Malala Yousafzai
Malala Yousafzai, a Pakistani Nobel Peace laureate, has condemned Aung San Suu Kyi's apparent inaction in response to the emerging crisis in Myanmar.

"Every time I see the news, my heart breaks at the suffering of the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar," Yousafzai, who famously survived being shot in the head by the Taliban, tweeted on September 3.

Yousafzai, 20, called on the international community to provide sanctuary for those fleeing the violence.

"Other countries, including my own country Pakistan, should follow Bangladesh's example and give food, shelter and access to education to Rohingya families fleeing violence and terror," she wrote.

"Over the last several years I have repeatedly condemned this tragic and shameful treatment. I am still waiting for my fellow Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi to do the same."
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✔@Malala
My statement on the #Rohingya crisis in Myanmar:
Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the 1984 recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in ending South Africa's policy of apartheid, has also called on Aung San Suu Kyi to end the Rohingya's suffering.

Denouncing the "unfolding horror", the 85-year-old implored his "dearly beloved younger sister" to intervene in the crisis and "guide your people back towards the path of righteousness again", in an open letter published on September 7.

"If the political price of your ascension to the highest office in Myanmar is your silence, the price is surely too steep," he wrote.

"A country that is not at peace with itself, that fails to acknowledge and protect the dignity and worth of all its people, is not a free country. It is incongruous for a symbol of righteousness to lead such a country; it is adding to our pain."

WATCH:What's Myanmar's government doing to end the Rohingya crisis?
Shirin Ebadi
Shirin Ebadi, a prominent human rights activist and 2003 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, has accused Aung San Suu Kyi of having "turned her back on democracy once she came to power".

Though stopping short of calling for the prize to be stripped, Ebadi said Aung San Suu Kyi has failed to live up to the prize's ideals.

"Aung San Suu Kyi received this prize for her peaceful resistance in the face of oppression. She deserved to win it," she told Deutsche Welle. "How the Nobel peace laureates behave after taking the prize has nothing to do with the Nobel committee. It is up to the laureates to honor the award. Aung San Suu Kyi fails to do."
Antonio Guterres
Antonio Guterres, the United Nations secretary-general, has appealed to Myanmar's officials in a bid to end the ongoing crisis.

Guterres expressed concern that continued disruption could descend into a "humanitarian catastrophe with implications for peace and security that could continue to expand beyond Myanmar’s borders" in a letter sent to the UN Security Council.

Although he has not directly criticise Aung San Suu Kyi, the secretary-general condemned Myanmar's leaders.

"I appeal to all, all authorities in Myanmar, civilian authorities and military authorities, to indeed put an end to this violence that, in my opinion, is creating a situation that can destabilise the region," he told reporters on September 5.

"The grievances and unresolved plight of the Rohingya have festered for far too long."
READ MORE: Message to the world from Jashim, a Rohingya
Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's president, has claimed he will press world leaders to help Myanmar's Rohingya who he said are facing a genocide.

Turkey will raise the issue at the UN General Assembly meeting in New York this month - which will run from September 12 to September 25 - according to Erdogan.

"You watched the situation that Myanmar and Muslims are in … You saw how villages have been burnt ... Humanity remained silent to the massacre in Myanmar," he said on September 4.

Erdogan refrained from openly criticising Aung San Suu Kyi directly, but reportedly told her in a September 5 phone call that the violence perpetrated against Myanmar's Rohingya population was a violation of human rights.

During the discussion, he made clear that the Muslim world was deeply concerned about the situation, according to the Reuters news agency.

Turkey has agreed with Myanmar the right to provide aid to the country's northwestern region, where the Rohingya crisis is most acute.

Approximately 1,000 tonnes of food, clothes and medicine were delivered to Rakhine state on September 6.
Peter Popham
Peter Popham, biographer of two books about the life and work of Kyi, has called on Aung San Suu Kyi to resign.

Citing her decision in December 2011 to abide by Myanmar's constitution, which provides the army a "right to take over all powers of government whenever they feel it’s necessary", Popham labelled her situation "desperate" in an opinion piece published by The Independent on September 8.

"Instead of challenging the military, she is now its poodle, its patsy, its flak-catcher in chief. Senior general Min Aung Hlaing - responsible for operations against the Rohingya - is off the hook," he wrote.

"As Burma's de facto ruler, Suu Kyi bears ultimate responsibility for this grotesque over-reaction. As the most admired and famous Burmese person in the world, she owed the world an explanation for it. But her response has been lamentable … [giving] No indication at all that she shares in or even understands the outside world’s indignation.

"She has only one possible recourse: accept that in December 2011 she made a fatal error, and call it a day. The world would understand."
READ MORE: Myanmar faces international condemnation over Rohingya
Boris Johnson
Boris Johnson, the UK's foreign secretary, has decried Myanmar's treatment of its Rohingya population, claiming it is "besmirching the reputation of Burma".

The UK hopes Kyi will now use her "remarkable qualities" to end the crisis, Johnson said in a statement on September 2.

"Aung San Suu Kyi is rightly regarded as one of the most inspiring figures of our age," he said. "I hope she can now use all her remarkable qualities to unite her country, to stop the violence and to end the prejudice that afflicts both Muslims and other communities."
Tirana Hassan
Tirana Hassan, Amnesty International's crisis response director, has been a vocal critic of Myanmar's actions near the nation’s border with Bangladesh.

Though not explicitly referencing Aung San Suu Kyi, Hassan has called on the nation's leaders to end the suffering, and expressed the importance of a swift resolution to the situation.

"Rakhine state is on the precipice of a humanitarian disaster. Nothing can justify denying life-saving aid to desperate people," she said on September 4.

"By blocking access for humanitarian organisations, Myanmar's authorities have put tens of thousands of people at risk and shown a callous disregard for human life."

Hassan has also openly lamented the reported use of antipersonnel landmines on the nation's border with Bangladesh, which Amnesty International claims are being used by Myanmar's security forces to target those escaping the country.

"Authorities must immediately end this abhorrent practice against people who are already fleeing persecution," she said.
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INTERACTIVE: Persecution path - Following Myanmar's fleeing Rohingya [Al Jazeera]
Source: Al Jazeera News
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/...-suu-kyi-rohingya-crisis-170910090032580.html
 
No similar outrage when Saudi bombed Yemen or Pakistan bombing on zarb e azab...why only selective outrage...is Yemeni shia Muslims life or Pakistan pastun children life is less precious??
 
No similar outrage when Saudi bombed Yemen or Pakistan bombing on zarb e azab...why only selective outrage...is Yemeni shia Muslims life or Pakistan pastun children life is less precious??
As usual hypocrisy of the highest order, BD is looking at chance of adding more territory and for others its a chance to interfere in non-muslim country. Its just a matter of time before some mullah declares jihad.
 
No similar outrage when Saudi bombed Yemen or Pakistan bombing on zarb e azab...why only selective outrage...is Yemeni shia Muslims life or Pakistan pastun children life is less precious??

Even though your spreading filth in the usual fashion i felt compelled to correct you that conflicts you mentioned cannot be classified as genocide. There's no agenda to erase specific people. The Rohingya crisis is a genocide, so much that Myanmar has even unwittingly admitted it as a genocide.
 
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