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Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing - Updates & Discussions

Assessing the “ethno-political” conflict: Rohingyas statelessness and their vulnerability in Myanmar
October 23, 2017
Anant Mishra
Introduction
Civil wars dipped in “ethnic” colors pose a serious threat to international peace and security. The rise in such “ethno-political conflicts” has to make headlines and “topics” of numerous discussions on global arena ever since the world was divided into “blocs” and it dramatically escalated in the early 80s and late 90s.

By the end of the 20th century, many nations including Bosnia, Rwanda, Congo, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Indonesia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Haiti, and Colombia were “rigged” with “civil wars” dipped in the colours of “ethnicity” while global leaders and masses witnessed the “horrors” of war.

International communities, local, regional and national governments were facing rampant “civil wars” which pose a serious threat to the international peace and security.

However, today, such crisis presents in a much “complex” form, challenging the safety and security of the global order. The UN, to effectively understand the crisis, published numerous policy reports and invited global experts to participate in “intense” discussions which resulted in numerous “draft resolutions” highlighting the much-needed response to de-escalate the crisis.

Prof. James Hughes of the London School of Economics (LSE), an expert on genocides and ethnic conflicts, aggressively argued that the “the sudden rise of ethno-conflict and civil wars” that was spreading like “wildfire” engulfing major percentage of the world after the end of Cold War, is showing “significant” signs of reduction.

Policymakers must note that the ethnic conflicts which “immensely” spread in regional areas during the late 90s through “aggressive negotiation from the international communities,” de-escalated without affecting “significant” regions; but, today, the conflict continues to “engulfs” major regions of Africa and South-East Asia.

Today, the ethnic conflicts which the international community’s witness, are “remnants” of an escalated conflict which majorly occurred in the previous century, leaving no trace of new “actors” or “instigators” at play.

It is important to note that, the ethnic conflicts in South Asia are sheer “remnants” of the crisis which share significant links to the “colonial era.” Today, the national or regional disintegration coupled with “violent state and non-state actors” have become the new “instigators” of the ethno-political wars in many regions.
Familiarizing with the terminology
One understands by the term “ethnic conflicts” as the scenario of “tension” induced by “violence” or collision between two or more ethnic groups.

This term first “coined” during the post Second World War years which was “frequently” and “aggressively” used in the subsequent years of Cold War particularly in scenarios which resulted in large-scale “genocides.”

Theoretically, it can be further divided into three types:

1. Constructivist

2. Primordialist

3. Instrumentalists

The “ethnic conflict” in Myanmar falls under the category of Primordialist theory.

Experts in ethnic conflicts and genocides along with experts with particular knowledge and exposure to Primordialist scenarios of ethno-conflict, significantly argue that communities with multiple ethnicities exist because of “indifference” in traditions, majorly religions and behaviors high lighting the major impact of “primordial” features such as “biological and geographic” features.

A significant amount of ethnic-politico-conflict experts argue that the “cause” of the ethnic-conflict does not principally depend on “ethnicity” but largely depends upon political and socio-economic factors, regarding the traditional blame to “ethnicity” as a sheer myth.

Factually, the crisis of Muslim Rohingyas in Myanmar is largely political.

The political leadership is aggressively “instigating” Buddhists Rohingyas against their “counter-parts” Muslims which resulted in scenarios of “systematic government induced violence”- which has resulted in large scale casualties and deaths forcing Muslim Rohingyas to flee.
Understanding the causes
The principle reasons for an ethnic conflict in South–East Asia largely revolves around “pre-historic” tensions and continuing aggressions between two communities, which is an event of an “aggression” re-appear to become a grave threat to international communities.

Ethnic conflict wears the “insignia” of violence induced crisis from the past which reappears in times of “fragile domestic politics” and hence carries such importance for global and national communities.

It is quite easy for policymakers to identify the “instigator” and “intensity” of the conflict by simply analyzing the previous “entanglements” of different ethnic communities.

The causes of ethnic conflicts are largely the “principal factors of instigation” the factors which became the sole “reasons of instigation” for the conflict, followed by understanding the “reactionary measures” taken by the political leadership.

Furthermore, the “skeletal” of the ethnic conflict in Myanmar is “primordial.”

Academicians in support to “Primordialist” argue that individuals “religion and ethnicity” share an intense relationship with socio-economic lifestyle, their past and topography which then results in the creation of a different psychology, different culture and their values which are then overlapped with indifferent ethnicity.

Experts argue that essential factors such as security, basic yet necessary needs and the ability to survive in harsh circumstances come from such forces.

Moreover, experts also argue that the “urge for violence” in response to “denial of sheer existence,” insecurity and results in low participation of such minorities.

This further results in “organized crime” which then paves the way for their “right to exist” instigating “nationalism” particularly when they are dominated by “oppressive forces.”

These minorities then seek international support and are frequently supported by countries aligning with their thoughts.

By gaining the support from international communities, they would fulfill the demand, largely the “right to exists.”

Using the assistance received from international communities, they can then aggressively mobilize their groups and severely compromise the state’s resources.

Scenarios such as this, on the larger scale, give birth to anarchism that is most likely to take over the groups “leadership” while posing a grave threat to other minorities.

Hence it is imperative for policymakers at the international level to pay necessary attention to domestic security. The betrayal of trust or repeated “unsuccessful” attempts to trust other minor communities also triggers minor conflicts which may soon result into a full-blown conflict.

The minority groups view each other with sheer “suspicion” and portray a behavior of conflict, this results in strong minority groups suppressing the minors.

Particularly in weak political culture strong ethnic community with certain influence support the state authorities. At the global arena, international community’s tend to create “committees and forums” for the weaker minority groups, giving them a platform to speak “fearlessly” speak against the systematic oppression, but at the ground level, the government tends to ignore their plight.

Hence, in countries with migratory weak minorities, a new “type” of conflict appears. Although in such times, the government under pressure from global communities tends to activate institutional reforms which remain hardly in place.

This saga of “betrayal/distrusts” gives “one-time” opportunity for minority groups to pursue an “aggressive” stance against the oppression forces and declare rebellion against the state to create a region/country of their own.

This scenario coupled with the poor socio-economic condition and “vulnerable” government results in a “political vacuum” which then attracts ethnic businessmen, mercenary groups to extend their services while playing an active part in this epic.

If politico-economic resources are in favor of one ethnic minority whereas depriving other minority groups, especially the strong minority, ethnic conflict emerges rapidly.

In case of such scenario when the government takes sides of most privileged minorities in conflict, the disadvantaged and weaker minority groups losses their hope in the social structure and during this scenario, the weaker minority looks for a third party which could offer services and protection to the group.

This results in the rise of a “War of Independence” when the weaker minority fails to find a third party and declare all available assets in the war.

In the absence of a mediator or a third party, the resolution to this ethnic conflict becomes “extremely difficult” since most of the times scenarios such as these are supported by non-state actors which further increase the complexity of this problem.

There are many academicians who view the ethnicity as a “principle” cause before even considering the nature of different behaviors of weaker minorities, the liquidity of their behavior, rapidly declining concerns of oppression forces towards ethnic values and presence of large-scale violent non-state actors into account.

However, the ethno-conflict that aroused in Myanmar is very different than other ethnic based conflicts in South East Asia.

Myanmar has always been a nation of “militaristic importance/preferences” and portrays values of “traditions.” In the light of statement as mentioned earlier, there is a presence of different sections of society which continues to induce ethnic violence between Muslim and Buddhists Rohingyas.
Years under severe oppression by Military Junta
Burma has been under the rule of military Juntas for more than half centuries, coupled with strong nationalism and heavily influenced by Theravada Buddhism, many weaker minorities such as Rohingya, Kokang and Panthay became victims of systematic discrimination for years.

Furthermore, many elements from pro-democracy groups particularly those belonging to the Burman ethnic majority never considered Muslim Rohingyas as “equals.”

In the similar context, Burmese governments were frequently hammered by international communities for systematically provoking and inducing violence against the ethnic minority groups particularly the Muslim Rohingyas and Panthay.

As stated before, Muslim Rohingyas are considered to be the most “brutally and systematically suppressed” and “deprived” of all minorities.

After losing their citizenship in 1982, they were banned from traveling. Their property was confiscated, looted, right to marriage was “forbidden” and reproductive rights were strictly restricted.

According to a report published by Amnesty International, the Muslim Rohingyas continue to suffer from excessive human rights violations under the military Junta since it first came to power in 1978 and since then many have fled to neighbouring countries such as Bangladesh, India, Indonesia out of fear of persecution, for Muslim Rohingyas, their movement is strictly “monitored and restricted” and a large percentage of them have been denied Burmese citizenship.

Today, they continue to face torture, sexual exploitation, and unnecessary taxation, confiscation of property, forced disappearances, and restrictions on marriage.

Rohingyas were forced to work on manual labor particularly on the construction of roads, railways, although it significantly decreased in the northern region of Rakhine state.

More than 200,000 Muslim Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh during Operation Dragon King which was carried by the military in 1978.

The official Modus Operandi was to target individuals living in the country with an illegal citizen status along with illegal foreigners.

However, the targets of these military operations were Muslim men, women, and children.

The operation resulted in large-scale killings, rape, and other “heinous crimes.” Between 1991 and 1992, a fresh influx of over quarter million refugees reached Bangladesh.

They narrated scenarios of forced labor, disappearances, large-scale executions and rape which “shocked” the global communities. Since 2005, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has been the principal United Nations agency tasked to “repatriate” Muslim Rohingyas from Bangladesh, but accusations of human rights abuses in certain refugee camps have temporarily halted their efforts.

Despite active participation by United Nations agency, a large percentage of refugees continue to remain in camps hosted by Bangladesh and other humanitarian agencies.

Their inability to return to their state out of sheer fear from the “oppressing” government further complexing an already complex humanitarian issue.

In the previous years, thousands of Muslim Refugees have crossed dangerous oceans to reach Thailand whereas over 111,000 refugees have been staying in camps along the Myanmar-Bangladesh border.

Many have been forced to sail out in the dangerous open waters. In one incident, the Thailand army rescued over 190 Muslim Rohingyas from the open seas.

In another incident, the group of Rohingyas rescued by the Indonesian military narrated the “stories of crimes against humanity” conducted by the Thai military.

A report published by UNHCR stated that in the year 2016 over five boats were rescued through military efforts whereas four boats sank in the seas.

In the year 2015 numerous “graveyards” of Muslim Rohingyas were located in and around the borders of Thailand and Malaysia.

Furthermore, in the current year, thousands of Rohingyas refugees headed towards the shores of Malaysia. Many of Rohingya refugees getting caught in the “prostitution and slavery” do not make the headlines.

Large-scale violence, mass killing, systematic torture, and rape continues to encourage Rohingyas to undertake the “risky” routes through seas.
The riots of 2012
The riots of 2012 in Rakhine state are series of “systematically induced discrimination” instigated by the military Junta against the Muslim Rohingyas in the northern regions of Rakhine State in Myanmar.

The riots “erupted” after weeks of ethnic tensions between the Muslim Rohingyas and ethnic Rakhine and received sharp criticism from the international communities. However, the reason behind the conflict remains unclear even after rigorous efforts by international communities; but according to many humanitarian experts, Muslim Rohingyas were repeatedly “systematically” killed by the ethnic Rakhine after a Rakhine woman was raped and killed.

According to the experts, this “might” be the cause. The entire houses of Muslim Rohingyas were burnt, and a significant number of government buildings were attacked.

In a press release, the Burmese Rohingya Organization UK (BROUK) stated that over 650 Rohingyas were killed with over 1,200 missing, while over 80,000 were displaced.

According to the government records, the violence which erupted between the Rakhine Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims resulted in the death of over 78 people, whereas over 87 injured.

The governments then imposed curfews and deploy armed units on the ground. Subsequently, an emergency was declared in the Rakhine state, which allowed the military to assist local administration in maintaining law and order.

The Myanmar agencies have frequently been accused of instigating violence especially targeting the Muslim Rohingyas.

A significant number of Buddhist organizations tried to prevent humanitarian aid from reaching the Muslims.

The then Myanmar responded by excluding Rohingyas from the list of minority groups subsequently preventing them from obtaining citizenship.

More than 130 ethnic groups have been debarred from receiving Burmese citizenship. Today, they have no right to vote and do not hold Myanmar citizenship.
Conclusion

AS stated before, Muslim Rohingyas are the most persecuted people in the world today.

After careful study, the Muslim Rohingyas continue to receive inadequate assistance and support from international aid organizations of the world.

Their humanitarian rights no longer exist, neither their social rights nor any right to citizenship.

Many agencies particular of the UN and other international community’s continue to show concern towards their immediate humanitarian needs, which remains inadequate.

The global community intends to argue on security other member countries failing to adequately address the security and the rights of Rohingyas to exist.

Hence, it is imperative for policymakers to address the issue immediately by inviting key actors in the discussion, particularly the principle instigator Myanmar.

Through “aggressive” diplomacy, many international and regional organizations can effectively force Myanmar to initiate new legislative measures ensuring their “right to return.” Muslim Rohingyas continues to become a burden on neighboring countries such as India and Bangladesh since they both are densely populated countries.

Although, any efforts could only prove vital, if it comes from Myanmar within.

It is imperative for global nations, regional organizations to ensure that Myanmar takes the responsibility and actively participate in de-escalating the situation and take a progressive step in securing the future of Rohingyas.

See more at: http://southasiajournal.net/assessi...elessness-and-their-vulnerability-in-myanmar/
 
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#Rohingya
Victim of Genocide -Story 01

U.S. weighs calling Myanmar’s Rohingya crisis ‘ethnic cleansing’
SAM Staff, October 25, 2017
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Rohingya refugees wait to receive humanitarian aid at Kutupalong refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh 24October 2017, Photo: Reuters
The State Department is considering formally declaring the crackdown on Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims to be ethnic cleansing, U.S. officials said on Tuesday (Oct 24), as lawmakers called for sanctions against the Southeast Asian country’s military.

Pressure has mounted for a tougher U.S. response to the Rohingya crisis ahead of President Donald Trump’s maiden visit to Asia next month when he will attend a summit of Southeast Asian countries, including Myanmar, in Manila.

U.S. officials are preparing a recommendation for Secretary of State Rex Tillerson that would define the military-led campaign against the Rohingya as ethnic cleansing, which could spur new sanctions, the U.S. government sources said.

The proposal – part of an overall review of Myanmar policy – could be sent to Tillerson as early as this week, and he would then decide whether to adopt it, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

More than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled Rakhine state in Buddhist-majority Myanmar, mostly to neighboring Bangladesh, since security forces responded to Rohingya militants’ attacks on Aug. 25 by launching a crackdown. The United Nations has already denounced it as a classic example of ethnic cleansing.

Three U.S. officials testifying at a Senate hearing on Tuesday declined to say whether the treatment of the Rohingya was ethnic cleansing, but listed new measures including targeted sanctions that Washington is considering.

Those steps, however, stopped short of the most drastic tools at Washington’s disposal such as reimposing broader economic sanctions suspended under the Obama administration.
Also Read: Myanmar to take back Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh
“I‘m not in a position … to characterize it today, but to me this very closely resembles some of the worst kind of atrocities that I’ve seen during a long career,” Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Mark Storella said when pressed to say whether he viewed the situation as ethnic cleansing.

Senator Ben Cardin, the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, said he considered the treatment of the Rohingya “genocide” and is working on bipartisan legislation that could spell out whether additional sanctions are needed.

Myanmar, also known as Burma, insists that action was needed to combat “terrorists.”

The recommendation to Tillerson – first reported by the Associated Press – is not expected to include a determination on whether “crimes against humanity” have been committed, as this would require further legal deliberations, one U.S. official said.

The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Also Read: ‘Suu Kyi government played into the hands of the military’
Some U.S. lawmakers criticized Aung San Suu Kyi, head of Myanmar’s civilian-led government and a Nobel peace laureate once hugely popular in Washington, for failing to do more.

Senator Bob Corker, Republican chairman of the committee, chided Suu Kyi for what he called “dismissiveness” toward the plight of the Rohingya and said it might be time for a “policy adjustment” toward Myanmar.

At the hearing, Patrick Murphy, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian And Pacific Affairs, said additional sanctions were being considered, but cautioned that doing so could lessen Washington’s ability to influence Myanmar.
SOURCE REUTERS
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/...ng-myanmars-rohingya-crisis-ethnic-cleansing/
 
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The Rohingya Crisis in Numbers

By UNITED NATIONS OCHA
OCTOBER 23RD, 2017
1982
The year a law was passed by Myanmar’s Government identifying 135 recognized 'national ethnic groups' that could claim citizenship. The Muslim Rohingya were not one of these groups, effectively rendering them stateless. They are now the largest stateless population in the world. In Rakhine State, their freedom of movement is severely restricted and they have been denied access to local schools, hospitals and markets.
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25 August 2017
Attacks by Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army on border posts prompt a violent response by Myanmar security forces, leading 600,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh as of 20 October 2017.
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809,000
The number of Rohingya refugees who have fled violence and persecution in Myanmar to seek refuge in Bangladesh, including 603,000 who have arrived since 25 August. They report horrific stories of mass killings, arson, rape and abuse.
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288
The number of Rohingya villages that Human Rights Watch estimates have been destroyed since 25 August, according to satellite data. The UN’s Human Rights chief, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein has described the Government’s operations in northern Rakhine State as a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”
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$434 million
Humanitarian agencies are calling for $434 million in the Rohingya refugee crisis response plan to assist 1.2 million people - mainly Rohingya refugees but also host communities in Bangladesh – with emergency relief and protection. Priorities are clean water and sanitation, shelter, food, and counselling services to help heal deeply traumatized children, women and men.
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29%
As of 24 October, the Rohingya humanitarian response plan had received $130 million, or 29 per cent of requirements. Donors have pledged 76 per cent of the $434 million appeal at a 23rd October pledging event. This money now urgently needs to be turned into commitments.
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10,333
The average number of Rohingya refugees who have crossed into Bangladesh daily since 25 August. Most are taking refuge in Kutupalong, and Kutupalong Expansion - makeshift camps that have been set up in Cox’s Bazar district on land made available by the Government of Bangladesh.
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700,487
In Cox’s Bazar, the World Health Organization and the Government of Bangladesh have administered oral cholera vaccinations to more than 700,000 people as of 29 October, making this the second largest oral cholera vaccination campaign ever.
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536,000
The total number of people reached by aid agencies with food assistance, though funding shortages have meant that one third of these people received only partial rations. Agencies are also providing clean water, sanitation services, healthcare, shelter materials, essentials like cooking equipment and jerry cans, and counselling services for the traumatized.
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https://unocha.exposure.co/the-rohi...l&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
 
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ROHINGYA CRISIS
Influx on amid diplomatic move
Diplomatic Correspondent | Published: 00:05, Oct 26,2017 |
Updated: 00:25, Oct 26,2017
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Rohingya refugees walk through water after crossing the Bangladesh-Myanmar border, at a port in Teknaf on Wednesday. — Reuters photo
Bangladesh continued diplomatic move for ensuring return of Rohingyas to their homeland Rakhine State of Myanmar while Rohingya influx into the country continued on Wednesday with thousands of the ethnic minority people fleeing ethnic cleansing in Rakhine.

While a Chinese special envoy was shuttling between Dhaka and Nay Pyi Taw for conveying commitment of the Myanmar government for taking back its nationals, the Bangladesh authorities were yet to trust the Myanmar authorities on the realisation of its commitments soon, officials said.
Bangladesh on Wednesday requested China for her constructive all-round engagement for expediting return of the Myanmar nationals to their home.

The Chinese envoy conveyed that commitment of the Myanmar government ‘is much stronger this time,’ foreign secretary M Shahidul Haque said at his office after a meeting with a Chinese special envoy.

‘We said that we would find it true when they [Myanmar] would implement this commitment,’ he said.
Shahidul Haque said that he told the envoy that there were about 4,00,000 Myanmar nationals in Bangladesh when the envoy came six months ago and now the number of Myanmar nationals was over one million as violence continued in Rakhine State.

Chinese foreign ministry special envoy on Asian affairs Sun Guoxiang arrived Dhaka from Yangon Tuesday night for discussing the resurgence of crisis created with the recent Rohingya influx into Bangladesh.

The Chinese envoy would return to Myanmar again and might convey Bangladesh’s position about the situation, the foreign secretary said.

Sun was told that Bangladesh had no conflict with Myanmar other than one point, repatriation of Myanmar nationals.

Presence of over a million Rohingyas is a huge burden on Bangladesh, which has allowed them only on humanitarian grounds, Shahiduyl Haque said, ‘It cannot linger for unlimited period.’
Asked if China was mediating between Bangladesh and Myanmar, he said that the question of mediation had not come as such as China said that it wanted a peaceful solution to the crisis through bilateral negotiations.

China wants to settle the situation working with both Bangladesh and Myanmar, the foreign secretary said.

Asked if Chinese envoy communicated any new message, he said China was very eager to see a peaceful solution as existing situation was unfavourable for Asia in general and the region in particular.
The Chinese envoy would have not been shuttling between the two countries if the situation was good for the region, he said
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Another diplomat said that Bangladesh officials said China should help to resolve the crisis although China had its own dynamics in engaging with Myanmar.

Earlier in the morning on Wednesday, the foreign secretary and senior foreign ministry officials were engaged in an interactive session on Rohingya issues with mission chiefs of the member countries of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and the BRICS.
Shahidul also held a meeting with Saudi ambassador Abdullah HM Al-Mutairi on Rohingya issues, the officials said.

The Bangladesh side sought support of the OECD and BRICS member countries and the Arab kingdom in international moves for holding a special session of the UN Human Rights Council at the earliest to exclusively discuss Rohingya issues.

Support of at least 16 of the 45 member-countries is required for holding a special session of the UNHRC.

Bangladesh also insisted that the UNHRC member countries should consider adopting resolutions in this regard.

Mission chiefs of the United States, the United Kingdom, China, Russia, India, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and Vatican, among others, were present in the meeting.

After the meeting with mission chiefs and the OECD and BRICS member countries, Chinese ambassador to Dhaka Ma Mingqiang said at the foreign ministry that the way China engaged herself in diplomacy was different from many other countries.

‘We don’t make noise like many other countries,’ he said.
Both Bangladesh and Myanmar ‘are friends of China and we want the two countries engage for a peaceful solution of the problem through bilateral negotiations,’ Ma said.


The Rohingya new arrivals on Wednesday alleged that the Myanmar military forces set fire to their villages at Buthidaung three days before amidst international outcry against the Myanmar regime for stopping ethnic cleansing in Rakhine State.

Over 6,04,000 minority Rohingyas, mostly women, children and aged people, entered Bangladesh fleeing unbridled murder, arson and rape during ‘security operations’ by Myanmar military in Rakhine, what the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing, between August 25 and October 24.

Then new ongoing influx took the total number of undocumented Myanmar nationals and registered refugees in Bangladesh to over 10,23,000 till Tuesday, according to estimates of UN agencies.
During his last visit in Dhaka in the last week of April, Sun Guoxiang insisted in line with the Myanmar government’s position that Bangladesh and Myanmar should bilaterally resolve the matter of return of all Myanmar nationals.

Sun Guoxiang is also actively involved in the Chinese government’s efforts to promote peace process involving minority groups in Myanmar.
http://www.newagebd.net/article/26958/influx-on-amid-diplomatic-move

12:00 AM, October 26, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:31 AM, October 26, 2017
Dhaka pushing for special UN session
Foreign minister briefs envoys from different countries; China for a peaceful solution
Diplomatic Correspondent
Dhaka has intensified diplomatic efforts for the UN Human Rights Council to hold a special session and adopt a resolution on the Rohingya crisis.
Such efforts, however, need support of at least 16 of the 45 member-countries for an exclusive session of the UNHRC on any issue, diplomatic sources said.

As part of the government effort, Foreign Secretary Md Shahidul Haque briefed diplomats from the US, UK, China, Russia, India, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and Vatican yesterday morning.

Senior foreign ministry officials were also present during the briefing.

The foreign secretary also held an exclusive meeting with Saudi Ambassador Abdullah HM Al-Mutairi on the Rohingya issue.

During the briefing, foreign diplomats sought to know Dhaka's short, mid and long-term plans for the crisis.

In reply, officials said Bangladesh was focusing on immediate solution and wanted to see the Rohingyas taken back to their homeland as soon as possible, foreign ministry sources said.

More than 600,000 Rohingyas entered Bangladesh since August 25. They are mostly children, women and elderly people.
CHINA FOR PEACEFUL SOLUTION
China wants to see a peaceful solution to the Rohingya crisis, foreign ministry officials said yesterday.

“Their intention and commitment for sending them [Rohingyas] back is now stronger,” the foreign secretary told reporters quoting Chinese special envoy of Asian Affairs, Sun Guoxiang, after their meeting.

He said Dhaka informed the Chinese envoy when he came here six months ago, that the number of Rohingyas was four lakh and now it stood at one million.

The foreign secretary said China was very worried about the crisis as it was not good for the region.

However, the question of China's mediation to resolve the crisis did not come up for discussion, he added.

“We sought support in the areas where we need. We're always optimistic and this time, too [regarding repatriation],” said the foreign secretary.

He said the only issue discussed at the meeting was the Rohingya issue and Bangladesh's position is to send them back safely.

“Our stance is that their nationals will have to be taken back. It's our one-point agenda. It's an unbearable burden. The prime minister allowed them to stay here on humanitarian ground. But it cannot be for long,” he said.

Replying to a query about China's position on the issue, the foreign secretary said both Myanmar and Bangladesh were China's friends. “They want to bring a peaceful resolution working with the two friends.”

Sun Guoxiang, who arrived in Dhaka on Wednesday, will head for Beijing this morning.
AID WORKERS BARRED
Aid workers were barred from visiting a camp for displaced Muslims in the central part of Rakhine State yesterday.

A group of about 10 Myanmar nationals, working for US and Britain- based charity Relief International (RI), were forced to turn back when residents of the mostly Buddhist ethnic Rakhine community staged a protest in the town of Myebon, a regional administrator and an activist told Reuters.

In early September, Myanmar blocked all UN aid agencies from delivering vital supplies of food, water and medicine to thousands of Rohingyas, a persecuted Muslim minority in Rakhine.

The Rohingyas, who recently entered Bangladesh, complained of food crisis in parts of Rakhine, while UN and other aid agencies and rights bodies have been demanding that they be allowed to provide emergency supplies to Rakhine.

“The RI group was trying to go to the camp and the locals blocked the way,” Tin Shwe, Myebon's administrator, told Reuters, adding that the aid workers returned to their office.

Khin Thein, a leader of a regional branch of the Arakan Women's Network, said her group joined the protest after authorities told the community the NGO would provide education about gender-based violence, hygiene and sanitation to Muslims.

”They have food, they have shelter to live,“ she told Reuters. ”We can't accept these kinds of excessive things for them.

"We will not allow them to pass through our township. We already protested several times in the past. We have suspicions about them. We don't trust foreigners, international people.”

Yesterday's incident was the latest example of the numerous obstacles that humanitarian organisations face in Rakhine State, said Pierre Peron, a spokesman for the United Nations' Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
US MOUNTS PRESSURE ON TRUMP
US lawmakers have mounted pressure on the Trump administration to declare that ethnic cleansing is taking place against the Rohingya Muslim population in Myanmar.

Hundreds of women, children and men belonging to the Rohingya minority have been "systematically killed" and driven from their homes, their villages burned to the ground by Myanmar's military, lawmakers charged the State Department officials during a hearing.

They angrily said the US made no major change to its ties to Myanmar, and its officials have shied away from legal terms such as "ethnic cleansing" or "crimes against humanity" despite what many say is strong evidence.

"This is ethnic cleansing, it's pretty clear," said Senator Ben Cardin, a Maryland Democrat. "Yes, I think it's genocide."

Three US officials testifying at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Tuesday declined to refer to violence against the Rohingya as "ethnic cleansing", before a complete review is announced, according to US media reports.

Senator Bob Corker, chairman of the committee, presided over the hearing. The members of the committee, including Senator Cardin, took part in the hearings on “Assessing US Policy towards Burma: Geopolitical, Economic and Humanitarian Considerations.”

The officials told the lawmakers that the State Department has identified and announced new and ongoing actions to punish those who have committed atrocities.

Meanwhile, US Special Representative and Policy Coordinator for Burma (Myanmar) W Patrick Murphy said the US is working with the international community to hold accountable those responsible for atrocities in Rakhine, says a statement from the US state department.

"What I can say as a matter of policy, we've assessed that atrocities have been committed and we must pursue accountability," he said in a special briefing in Washington yesterday.
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpa...risis-aid-workers-turned-away-rakhine-1481911
 
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Desperate for news, Rohingya refugees tune in to ‘WhatsApp radio’
Reuters
Published at 08:23 AM October 26, 2017
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Rohingya refugees who were stranded walk near the no man's land area between Bangladesh and Myanmar in the Palongkhali area next to Ukhiya on October 19, 2017 AFP
Dozens of WhatsApp groups have sprung up to fill the information gap
Sat in his hillside grocery shop in a Bangladesh refugee camp, Rohingya Muslim Momtaz-ul-Hoque takes a break to listen to an audio recording on his mobile phone, while children and passers-by gather round to hear the latest news from Myanmar.

“I listen because I get some information on my motherland,” said Hoque, 30, as he plays a message on WhatsApp explaining the Myanmar government’s proposals for repatriating refugees.

Hoque has been in Bangladesh since an earlier bout of violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state in 1992, but the number of refugees in the camps has swelled dramatically to more than 800,000 in recent weeks, after a massive Myanmar military operation sent around 600,000 people fleeing across the border.

Tens of thousands of exhausted refugees have arrived with little more than a sack of rice, a few pots and pans and a mobile phone powered by a cheap solar battery, and many are desperate for news of what is going on back home.

With few news sources in their own language and low levels of literacy, audio and video messages distributed on apps such as WhatsApp, Facebook and YouTube have become a community radio of sorts for the Muslim minority.

Dozens of WhatsApp groups have sprung up to fill the information gap. Their offerings range from grainy footage of violence, to listings of the names and numbers of people missing in the chaos of the exodus, or even an explainer from educated Rohingya on how to adjust to life in the camps.
100% trust
At a shop selling cold drinks in the Leda refugee camp, two men played “WhatsApp news” through a loudspeaker.

Out of breath, a man narrated a scene purportedly from a village in Myanmar’s Buthidaung region, according to Mohammed Zubair, a refugee who translated the broadcasts for Reuters.

“They are surrounding the village. We are under attack from the military and the mogs…some people are seriously injured,” Zubair translates the speaker as saying, using a derogatory term common in Bangladesh to refer to ethnic Rakhine Buddhists.

“I trust it 100%,” Zubair said of the information.

Reuters was not able to verify the account.

The WhatsApp groups tend to have hundreds of members, meaning that the spread of information depends on people passing on the news.

Many of the listeners do not know who is sending the message or the trustworthiness of the broadcaster. Some said outdated or inaccurate reports were common.

“In some cases, we got audio messages of villages burning in Myanmar, and when we contact people in those villages, there’s nothing,” said one refugee inside a tea shop in Bangladesh‘s Kutupalong camp.

Other refugees said videos of violence claimed to have been filmed in villages in Myanmar turned out to be footage from other countries.
Listening in the dark
Many also worry that the unregulated nature of WhatsApp groups increases opportunities for voices keen to push an agenda rather than share facts.

Rohingya rebel group the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) – whose August 25 attacks on security forces triggered the latest crisis – and its followers have been among the most active adopters of WhatsApp to spread their message.

Audio messages urging support, updates on the latest military movements and official press releases dominate some groups.

Several refugees in Bangladesh said they had no idea if the messages, often posted by people with phone numbers registered in the Middle East or other parts of Asia, were actually from ARSA members.

Refugees also worry that Bangladeshi security forces want to monitor the broadcasts, and are looking in the camps for ARSA supporters.

At the tea shop in Kutupalong camp, refugees have stopped listening to the broadcasts on loudspeakers during daylight hours, preferring to gather clandestinely at night instead.

Still, many Rohingyas say social media platforms play a crucial role in keeping spirits up among the community.

“The Rohingya people are not organised,” said Hoque, the grocer. “They cannot take out their frustration any other way, so this is a way of protesting.”
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/s...e-news-rohingya-refugees-tune-whatsapp-radio/
 
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With the Rohingya refugees' relentless influx, Bangladesh is experiencing yet another height in the already troubled deeper political crises within the country.
Bangladesh's foreign relations are once again proving to be one sided and lacks potential diplomatic bearing, making the situation even more uncertain, at the face of other conspiracies to let down the whole nation. what do we expect next .....

 
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Channel 4 News
21 mins ·
Shocking testimony from Rohinghya women about rape and assault by soldiers in the Myanmar military.
Jonathan Miller reports from a refugee camp in south eastern Bangladesh where women who have fled across the border.
Myanmar's military has denied claims that they raped women.
This report contains distressing testimony about sexual violence.

Born refugee
Photos and text: Turjoy Chowdhury
Conceived in the wombs of women crossing the border and delivered at refugee camps, Rohingya babies are born refugees.
Their future is called into question as they are stateless under Bangladesh's Citizenship Law and are not recognised as children of citizens by Myanmar. Without birth certificates they cannot enroll in schools.
Without proper healthcare, they face severe starvation.

Nestled in colourful blankets given as aid, these babies are between a day and three months old. What life awaits these children born in an alien place where they have no rights and no statehood?
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See In the shadow of violence for the full list of articles on this special issue of Star Weekend.
http://www.thedailystar.net/star-weekend/the-shadow-violence/born-refugee-1474945
 
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Rohingya crisis calls for new initiatives in regional politics
Faruque Ahmed
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With India and China supporting Myanmar’s ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in the region Bangladesh has become the unwilling victim of the exodus of refugees to shelter the homeless.
People had expected that Indian external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj during her visit to Dhaka would recognize the concern of Bangladesh and call upon Myanmar to stop the genocide.


Myanmar can’t destroy its ethnic Muslim minority and push them into Bangladesh. The entire world is denouncing the brutality of Myanmar military and as a regional power and Bangladesh’s best friend India was expected to play its due role to resolve the crisis.
Sushma’s guarded statement
But surprisingly her statements at all levels during the visit remained carefully limited to talk about the ‘displaced persons’ without naming Rohingyas by name. This is what the Myanmar government also does to refer to Rohingyas as the use of word Rohingya is banned in Myanmar.
Her suggestion that Bangladesh is India’s best neighbor therefore, appears hollow.

Sushma has voiced concern over the violence in the Rakhine state and hoped normalcy will return to the state with the return of the displaced persons. For this the recommendations of the Kofi Annan Commission need to be implemented. She said long term solution to the situation in Rakhine state is rapid socio-economic and infrastructure development.

India is helping Myanmar with financial and technical assistance for such development and all communities will benefit from it. But many fear that linking the return of the Rohingyas with such economic and infrastructural development risks slowly abandoning their cause.

Critics say if India wants to see the Rohingyas as beneficiaries of its development assistance, it should ask Myanmar to stop killing them and torching their villages.
The community must not be uprooted.
But she refrained from even condemning Myanmar for the killing.


It was evidently disappointing despite Bangladesh government’s call to put sustained pressure on Myanmar to end the crisis.

No wonder, the Indian FM’s statement has to match her prime minister’s open support for the Myanmar government. Indian Prime Minister Mr Narendra Modi expressed his country’s open support to Myanmar over Rohingya issues last month during his visit there saying India understands the country’s position on it.

Sushma Swaraj reiterated it again here further deepening the people’s frustration who were upbeat that she may take the plight of Rohingyas seriously and agree to use India’s power and influence as a friend to protect the Rohingyas.
India can’t annoy Myanmar
The Indian help was rightly expected when the political relations of Bangladesh with India are at all time high and Bangladesh is facing a kind of aggression from its (India’s) another friend on the border. It was expected that India should try to be even handed and help resolve the crisis.
Shushma did not go anywhere near that and only announced providing some aid to the refugees.

As things appear, India has been working on a long-term plan with Myanmar at political and diplomatic level over the past several years and at times at the cost of Bangladesh.
Its Myanmar policy aims at containing China’s influence in that country along its Northeast border where China has finalized a deal with Myanmar to build a deep-sea port at Sithwei in the Rakhine coast.

China is also setting up an industrial state in the region as part of its one belt one road policy initiative prompting India to put all its efforts to woo the Myanmar government and provide matching financial assistance. The Rohingya issue, therefore is not its priority.

Incidentally, India is also working to reduce China’s influence in Bangladesh.

It torpedoed China’s bid to set up a deep-sea port at Sonadia Island in the Bay of Bengal in 2014. China is now going to build that port at Sithwei while the Bangladesh government’s plan to build the deep-sea port at Sonadia has been shifted to Paira closer to Kolkata port.

The Japanese government plans to set up an energy hub at Matarbari Island in the Bay of Bengal including an LNG terminal and coal depots to set up several large coal-based power plants is also going slow while the giant Rampal power plant – with two 1320 MW power production facilities at western border has become a priority project.
Indian diplomats tell the truth
In fact the ‘Look East’ policy of Bangladesh with road and railway link from Chittagong to Thailand and China’s Kunming through Myanmar is no more a priority on the map in the volatile situation.
China is now going to the Bay of Bengal using deep sea port at Sithwei like the ones it has built in Sri Lanka and Gwador in Pakistan to link China with Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea.
Indian diplomats made made no secret of Indian strategy.
Former Indian foreign secretary Kanwal Sibal said in a recent article in an Indian daily that India should give priority to Myanmar over Bangladesh.
He suggested that Myanmar is India’s gateway to the East and it should work with Myanmar to build a highway from India to Vietnam through Myanmar and Thailand.
So India should not see Rohingya issue on bilateral perspective with Bangladesh.


In an interview with BBC former Indian High Commissioner to Dhaka Pinak Ranjan Chakrovarti has bluntly announced that India has no reason to stand by Bangladesh on the Rohingya issue. He said Delhi has closer relations with Myanmar like that of Bangladesh’s special friendship with China.
So Bangladesh should now tell China to do something on Rohingya issue.

He said Bangladesh rushes to the Chinese court whenever it feels like.
So it may now ask China to take some Rohingyas. It is not India’s problem and China must do something if it so believes.

But the fact is that like India, China also has not been helpful to Bangladesh when it comes to the Rohingya crisis. It has been left alone.
They are both supporting Myanmar to protect their interest.

Bangladesh has some strategic value to be the gateway to Bay of Bengal and beyond but its importance has apparently been outmaneuvered.

This is a critical time for Bangladesh and experts believe new initiative is needed now to rework the country’s policies to cope with the changing political landscape.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=2&date=0
 
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The real reason so many Rohingya girls are pregnant
Abdul Aziz, Cox's Bazar
Published at 12:22 AM October 27, 2017
Last updated at 02:33 AM October 27, 2017
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A medical officer providing vaccine to a Rohingya childFile Photo
The scenario revealed itself as thousands of minor Rohingya girls started to visit medical centres
Unable to do anything else to protect their daughters from the jaw of brutal sexual assault by Myanmar’s military forces and Mogh extremists, helpless parents in the country’s strife-torn Rakhine state are marrying off their underage daughters in a bid to save them from the assaulters.

The scenario revealed itself as thousands of minor Rohingya girls started to visit medical centres at refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar for pregnancy-related diseases.

Soon after giving birth to a baby, the girls in Rakhine expect another, because they think that remaining conceived is the only means to protect themselves from the brutalities of the army and Mogh (Rakhine Buddhists), narrated expectant women who frequently visit the medical centres.

Speaking to the Dhaka Tribune, Dr AZM Zajid, coordinator of a medical centre near Panbazar at Balukhali of Ukhiya upazila, said: “Every day, some 3,000 to 5,000 Rohingya people visit this centre with numerous diseases. Of them, 400 to 500 are expectant mothers who come to receive treatment for pregnancy-related complications.

“Many of them are suffering from various risks associated with pregnancy and childbirth. We have to struggle to provide treatment to this many patients at a time.”

Quoting victims, Zahid said: “In Rakhine, girls are married off at a very young age as their parents hold the belief that army men and Mogh would not target their married daughters.

“And the girls expect baby soon after their marriage. As a result, they each have five to 12 children. Even, we have treated expectant mothers as young as 12/14.”

Marrying off underage girls has apparently become a social convention, he added.

In the same vein, male counterparts of the Rohingya women said they too prefer the women to conceive at a young age.

“This has already become a custom in our society. The earlier a girl is married off, the better. Nobody wants his mother, wife and sisters to be violated [at the hands of army men], said an elderly Rohingya refugee, Abdul Zabber.

Fearing stigma, many such girls initially declined to talk to the Dhaka Tribune when the correspondent approached them for their accounts. Later, some of them admitted that they had to agree to wedding proposals as per their families’ will, as they were at a constant risk of losing their virginity to the soldiers and Buddhist extremists.

Moreover, the problems of child marriage and early pregnancy are getting even worse due to illiteracy among the girls and lack of family planning campaigns in Rakhine.

On Wednesday, when taking treatment at the Panbazar medical centre, Rohingya refugees Mubina Begum, Sapura Khatun and Ramija Begum described why girls in the state prefer being conceived all the year round.

According to the trio, army men, assisted by local Buddhists, rape Rohingya girls for hours at a stretch after picking them up from their homes, an organised campaign of sexual assault against the Rohingya Muslims that has been continuing for decades.

They burst into tears as they described their terrible ordeal to the correspondent.

Ramija wiped away her tears remembering her 14-year-old daughter Shahena, who never returned home after the Mogh had kidnapped her one year ago.

According to Dr Pintu Kanti Bhattacharya, deputy director of the Directorate General of Family Planning, Cox’s Bazar, there are over 30,000 expectant women among 603,000 Rohingya refugees who have fled to Bangladesh from Myanmar since August 24, after ethnic conflicts in Rakhine sparked the most rapid human exodus since the Rwandan genocide in 1994.

Since then, 700 to 1,000 babies have been born in Bangladesh, while over 10,000 women will be delivered of their babies soon, he said, adding that every day seven to eight babies are born at different medical centres in the camps.

Dr Pintu stressed the need for bringing the Rohingya women, who have taken shelter in Bangladesh, under the directorate’s family planning campaigns.

“Apart from treating the women infected with various diseases including malnutrition, seven medical teams comprised of 200 health workers are counselling them on birth control. The teams are also carrying out awareness building campaigns to this end,” the official continued.

According to reports released by the UNHCR, International Organization for Migration and other stakeholders, 120,000 pregnant and lactating women are in dire need of nutrition support in the refugee camps.

Dr Mejbah Uddin Ahmed, health and family planning officer in Ukhiya upazila, said: “Most girls who fled Rakhine are rape survivors. We have yet to identify all of them.”

Stigmatised and therefore reticent, the victims are too shy to share their ordeal with the physicians. As a result, listing and treating them have become a cumbersome task, he added.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/10/27/mysteries-surrounding-pregnancy-rohingya-girls/
 
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12:00 AM, October 27, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 04:42 AM, October 27, 2017
Same old trick
Myanmar still rigid on its strategy over Rohingyas' return
Shakhawat Liton
Myanmar's promise to take back the Rohingyas, who fled to Bangladesh to escape a brutal military crackdown, looks hollow, as it is still showing an unbending attitude towards them.

Following a Myanmar union minister's Dhaka visit early this month, Naypyidaw announced that repatriation of the Rohingyas must be done on the basis of verification of the refugees in line with the criteria agreed to by the two countries in a joint statement in 1992.

Yesterday, it came up with a similar statement hours after Bangladesh's home minister concluded his Myanmar visit.

Naypyidaw made it clear that it doesn't want to take back all 600,000 Rohingyas, who have taken refuge in Bangladesh over the last two months.

“I am not sure how many people would be repatriated," said U Tin Myint, permanent secretary of Myanmar's Ministry of Home Affairs.

"But that would be carried out based on the national verification process of the immigration and population ministry,” he said in the statement available on the official website of State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi.

If the 1992 agreement is followed, only around 14,000 Rohingyas may get the chance of repatriation, if at all. The reality is that more than six lakh Rohingyas have already arrived in Bangladesh since August 25.

The mention of the 1992 agreement is a tactic to buy time and avert international pressure.


The agreement was signed after an influx of more than 2.5 lakh fear-stricken Rohingyas who fled their country following a crackdown.

After prolonged discussions, Naypyidaw agreed that the Rohingyas having “Myanmar citizenship identity cards or national registration cards or other relevant documents” issued by the authorities concerned could return to Myanmar.

But since then, things have changed in Myanmar, making it impossible for Rohingyas to meet these criteria.

The Myanmar government began a citizenship verification process in 2014 under the draconian 1982 law which deprived Rohingyas of citizenship. It allowed temporary resident cardholders to apply for citizenship on condition that they are listed as Bangalees.

But in 2015, the temporary resident cards were also cancelled, denying Rohingyas voting rights in the 2015 elections that saw Suu Kyi's return to power. Later in June that year, Myanmar started issuing Identity Cards of National Verification.

As the Kofi Annan Commission set up by Suu Kyi this year reported that around 4,000 Rohingyas out of one million have been recognised as citizens or naturalised citizens. Around 10,000 more Rohingyas got national verification cards considered as a preparatory step towards citizenship.

Myanmar's proposal means it is unwilling to take back more than the 14,000 registered Rohingyas. And its intent not to take back all Rohingyas has been exposed through its home secretary's remark that “I am not sure how many people would be repatriated".

Naypyidaw's attitude also indicates that its strategy is designed to buy time as its home secretary said "Bangladesh wants to repatriate as soon as possible. But we will go step by step and form a joint working group for repatriation."

Myanmar is in no hurry even to form a joint working group.
When its minister visited Dhaka, both sides agreed to form the joint working group. In yesterday's statement, Myanmar said the working group would be formed in November.

And this time, it came up with another devious tactic as it is now speaking about resettlement of Rohingyas whom they will take back.
This indicates that Myanmar will not allow Rohingyas to return to their homeland in Rakhine State.

According to a report by Myanmar newspaper Irrawaddy, Myanmar home secretary said on Tuesday, "We are yet to rebuild infrastructure and draw up resettlement plans to accept them back."

When the Myanmar minister visited Dhaka early this month, there were around five lakh newly arrived Rohingyas in Bangladesh. But that number has now crossed six lakh.

Naypyidaw also doesn't believe in the UN statistics on Rohingyas crossing border into Bangladesh.

"There is a huge gap regarding the numbers of people who fled to Bangladesh between the ground survey of Rakhine State government and UN statistics," said the Irrawaddy report quoting the Myanmar president's office.

In yesterday's statement, Suu Kyi, de facto leader of Myanmar, was quoted that she expressed her firm conviction to resolve bilaterally all issues including repatriation of the Rohingyas in an amicable manner.

But the tactics of her government portrays the opposite.

In the statement, the Myanmar government, however, acknowledged a historic truth by saying the Rohingya families have lived in Myanmar for generations.

It further admitted that Rohingyas are denied citizenship and access to basic civil rights such as freedom of movement, decent education and healthcare.

These acknowledgements clearly show that the Myanmar state machinery has made things extremely difficult for the Rohingyas to live there as human beings.
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/mayanmar-rohingya-refugee-crisis-same-old-trick-1482355
 
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India loses the plot on the Rohingya issue: Hands the game to China
P K Balachandran, October 27, 2017
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Suu Kyi with Bangladesh Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan
India appears to have lost the plot on the Rohingya issue. Despite having a measure of clout both in Bangladesh and Myanmar, and appeals by Dhaka to mediate, New Delhi has been found wanting in terms of ideas and action, with the result, China has stolen the initiative.

It is undoubtedly due to Beijing’s behind-the-scenes efforts that Bangladesh and Myanmar have begun to talk, and talk constructively to determine the fate of an estimated one million displaced Rohingyas, now living in gigantic camps spread over 2000 acres in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh.

Confusion over its relative interests in the two countries; what it should do to contain China; and systemic deficiencies in the decision making process; appear to have resulted in India’s losing the initiative to China.

As a result, China could gain ground in both Bangladesh and Myanmar at India’s expense. China and India both have vital economic and strategic interests in Bangladesh and Myanmar.

It is undoubtedly due to Beijing’s behind-the-scenes efforts that Bangladesh and Myanmar have begun to talk, and talk constructively to determine the fate of an estimated one million displaced Rohingyas.

India sent a fair amount of relief material to the Rohingya refugees. But it did little else to solve the basic issue which had led to the exodus from Myanmar to Bangladesh. New Delhi did not even suggest a way out of the crisis. It was more concerned about preventing the Rohingyas from entering India and throwing out the 40, 000 already in the country.

It was only very recently that External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said in Dhaka that the only way out is to help Myanmar develop Rakhine State economically.
But her solution was way off the mark.
She had missed the point entirely.

The central issue is not economic backwardness, as she believes, but is religious-cum-ethnic. The Myanmarese do not accept the Rohingyas as indigenous nationals but as illegal Bengali Muslim immigrants, who stand in sharp contrast to the majority community in Myanmar –the Myanmarese Buddhists.

The Rohingyas have been denied citizenship though they have a history of settlement in Rakhine State going back to the 12th. Century. They have not only been denied citizenship but have been subjected to movement restrictions. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Prince Zeid has described the exodus from Rakhine into Bangladesh as being the result of “textbook ethnic cleansing. ”

Dhaka called for mediation by India and China. But while China responded, India did not, for fear of annoying its new-found friends in Myanmar.

China sent its Special Envoy on Asian Affairs, Sun Guoxiang, to Dhaka. India’s External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj was also in Dhaka for two days but she was more interested in the January 2019 parliamentary elections in Bangladesh, keen as India was in seeing that the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) contests the elections and not boycott it as it did in 2014. India wants to be able to play one Bangladeshi party against the other to promote its interests within the framework of parliamentary politics.
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Sun Guoxiang, China’s Special Envoy
Dhaka called for mediation by India and China. But while China responded, India did not, for fear of annoying its new-found friends in Myanmar.

Significantly, Swaraj did not speak about the Rohingyas until she was asked to.

On the other hand, China has always had a clear cut and consistent policy on the Rohingyas. It has disapproved the practice of pointing fingers at one of the parties to the conflict. It has argued that international intervention will only complicate matters and has called for bilateral talks between Myanmar and Bangladesh to solve the issue between themselves.

China has had no suggestions to give to the two countries, but has only wanted them to thrash out the issues untrammeled by fears of international intervention.

International intervention by the West and the UN is anathema to the Myanmar military which actually rules the country.
And this view is shared by Suu Kyi also, because she looks at the Rohingyas in the same way as the military does.

The threat of international intervention in the form of economic sanctions also worried Myanmar, which is just about coming out of isolation to exploit its immense natural resources for its own growth and prosperity in a highly globalized world.

The US is toughening its stand on the Rohingya issue and is contemplating targeted sanctions.
The Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) is going to meet the Third Committee of the UN General Assembly which deals with human rights issues.
The UN Human Rights Council is to take up the issue in November.

In a way, Bangladesh too is wary of a broad spectrum international intervention under the aegis of the UN as it could vitiate bilateral relations with India and China. It also does not want anybody and everybody to come with relief fearing infiltration by intelligence agencies, saboteurs and Islamic radicals.

It is said that a leading Muslim organization from the UK had made a very attractive offer and was given permission to provide relief in the Cox’s Bazar refugee camps. But it was sent packing in a week because its staff were radicalizing the refugees in night classes held in the camps.
10-Point Program
It was apparently due to China’s efforts that Kyaw Tint Swe, Minister for the Office of the State Counselor, visited Dhaka earlier in October. Following that, this week, the Bangladesh Home Minister, Mohammad Asaduzzaman Khan visited Myanmar as the head of a 10-member delegation and had an hour’s talks with Suu Kyi.

As a result, a 10-point program to take back the one million Rohingyas who had fled Myanmar has been adopted
.

According to the Myanmar news portal Mizzima the bilateral agreement envisages “stopping immediately entry by Myanmar nationals into Bangladesh and repatriation of refugees at the earliest date and restoring normalcy in Rakhine Region for their resettlement.”

Both sides also agreed to finish by November, the formation of the Joint Working Committee, which was announced in Dhaka early in October.

This is exactly what Dhaka has been wanting. It has achieved a breakthrough, as it were. On Wednesday Bangladesh Foreign Secretary Md. Shahidul Haque met Chinese Special Envoy Sun Guoxiang. He told the media later: “China is concerned. They believe this is not good for this region. They want the issue to be settled peacefully. They want it to be settled bilaterally. ”

The Foreign Secretary said that he updated the Chinese official, who had last visited Bangladesh in April this year. He told Sun that the total number of Rohingyas in Bangladesh has now gone up to one million.

Asked if Myanmar has agreed to take back the Rohingyas any time soon, Haque said: “We are optimistic.”
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/...n-the-rohingya-issue-hands-the-game-to-china/

UN rejects Myanmar’s claim of nod for houses for refugees
SAM Staff, October 27, 2017
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In this September 30, 2017 photo, Rohingya survivors of a boat capsize, Sona Mia (center) and Lalo Mia (right), sit in a room to meet administration officers at Kutupalong camp in Bangladesh, Photo: AP
Points to killings, arson and rape carried out by troops and ethnic Rakhine Buddhist mobs

A United Nations settlement programme, UN-Habitat in Myanmar, on Thursday rejected a state media report that it had agreed to help build housing for people fleeing violence in the northern Myanmar state of Rakhine, where an army operation has displaced hundreds of thousands.

The development underscores tension between Myanmar and the United Nations, which in April criticised the government’s previous plan to resettle Rohingya Muslims displaced by last year’s violence in “camp-like” villages.

More than 6,00,000 have crossed to Bangladesh since August 25 attacks by Rohingya militants sparked an army crackdown.
The UN has said killings, arson and rape carried out by troops and ethnic Rakhine Buddhist mobs since then amount to a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya.

The state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper said on 26 October that UN-Habitat had agreed to provide technical assistance in housing displaced people in Rakhine and the agency would work closely with the authorities to “implement the projects to be favourable to Myanmar’s social culture and administrative system.”

But Stanislav Saling, spokesman for the office of the U.N. resident coordinator in Myanmar, told Reuters in an email that “no agreements were reached so far” after the agency’s representatives attended a series of meetings with Myanmar officials this week in its capital Naypyitaw.

“The UN-Habitat mission emphasized that resettlement should be conducted in accordance with the principles of housing and property restitution for refugees and displaced persons to support their safe and dignified return to their places of origin,” he said, responding on behalf of UN-Habitat.

UN-Habitat welcomed the interest of the Myanmar government in international norms and standards, he added.

The UN principles state that all refugees or displaced persons have the right to return to property or land from which they were arbitrarily or unlawfully removed.
SOURCE REUTERS
https://southasianmonitor.com/2017/10/27/un-rejects-myanmars-claim-nod-houses-refugees/
 
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Statement by Ms. Yanghee Lee, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar at the 72nd session of the General Assembly
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Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Myanmar Yanghee Lee. UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferré
Statement by Ms. Yanghee Lee, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar at the 72nd session of the General Assembly
Third Committee, Agenda Item 72 (c),

25 October 2017
New York

Mr. Chair,
Excellencies,
Distinguished Delegates,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
A lot has happened between now and from the time I had finalized my report in late August following my visit to Myanmar in July. A lot has been reported on the situation in Rakhine State in the last two months and many allegations have been made of terrible inhuman violent acts.

While much that has happened is still uncertain, some undeniable facts have come out. What is undeniable is that hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims have fled to Bangladesh from northern Rakhine and that hundreds of their villages have been torched and burnt down since the alleged attacks by Rohingya militants on 25 August.

Yet Myanmar's State Counsellor asked us to consider the 50 per cent of Muslim villages that have not been destroyed. The Commander-in-Chief then supposedly suggested the number of those who have fled has been exaggerated and that they must have fled because they felt safer in Bangladesh. And the Minister responsible for the safe return of those who have fled reportedly speculated that the hundreds of thousands of people who fled did so as a ploy to give an appearance of ethnic cleansing.

Mr. Chair,
Before I speak further on the crisis that has unfolded dramatically these last weeks, please allow me to present the main highlights from my latest report as well as some developments since July which cover a range of issues from across the country.

Excellencies,
Earlier this month, Myanmar ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights albeit with a declaration in relation to the right of self-determination. I look forward to the government taking steps towards achievement of the full realization of the rights in the Covenant.
I remain of the view that constitutional reform must proceed to allow for proper operation of therule of law in Myanmar. I take the opportunity to again draw the attention of Myanmar officials and lawmakers to the non-exhaustive list of laws which I have identified to be in contravention of international human rights standards and consider their repeal or amendment.
If those laws are not prioritized for review, the legislative reform necessary for Myanmar to transition to democracy will certainly be incomplete.
I have in the past commended Myanmar's flourishing, widening democratic space; however, I find that the protection of reputation in Myanmar's national legislation appears to go beyond what is permissible under international law, effectively resulting in the criminalization of legitimate expression under which people, including journalists, continue to be prosecuted.

Distinguished Delegates,
During my July visit, I met representatives from civil society and communities affected by all threespecial economic zones currently in progress in Myanmar, specifically in Yangon, Dawei and Kyaukphyu. For all three zones, communities reported that initial phases or preparatory work had had a largely negative impact on their lives, with many of those affected still suffering negative consequences. There is a need for these projects to be carried out transparently, with communities receiving continuous information, being genuinely consulted and given the opportunity to suggest alternative options.
Land confiscation remains a major concern for not only communities affected by special economic zones but also thousands of others across the country. Though the government has established bodies to tackle the issue of land compensation, with over 9,000 cases pending, fully addressing all cases remains a big challenge, and communities are frustrated when their attempts to seek redress are unanswered.
Just over a week ago, the two-year anniversary of the signing of the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement was commemorated. Yet it is unclear whether the peace process has actually advanced since that time. Additionally, reports of violent clashes between the Tatmadaw and ethnic armed groups continue, including against a group who is party to the ceasefire. I am extremely concerned at not only the ongoing escalation of conflict in Kachin and Shan States, but also continuing and increasing reports of allegations of serious rights violations as well as decreasing humanitarian access.
There appears to be an increasing number of cases of civilians being killed or injured by mortars or artillery shells, including an incident in July in which a two-year old child was killed. The regularity of incidents raises concerns that parties to the conflict, including the Tatmadaw, are either not distinguishing between military and civilian targets or not systematically taking precautions to protect the civilian population. In addition, people continue to be displaced by conflict, and the large numbers of long-term displaced people in Kachin and northern Shan States, and Kayin State remain unchanged. I encourage efforts to address factors preventing returns, including the continued presence of the military in areas of origin, concerns about housing, land and property rights and difficulties in accessing civil and identification documents.

Ladies and Gentlemen,
It has been said that dangerous and dehumanizing speech tends to precede incidents of mass atrocities. And the reports that I have received certainly point to widespread use of hate speechdirected against the Rohingya population amounting to incitement to hostility and even violence. Unfortunately, there seems to be little sympathy, let alone empathy, for the Rohingya people in Myanmar. For decades, it has been cultivated in the minds of the Myanmar people that the Rohingya are not indigenous to the country and therefore have no rights whatsoever to which they can apparently claim.
I have also been receiving consistent reports of incidents against Christians and Muslims from across the country. There are reports of villages with signage either to keep Muslims out or to announce that they are Muslim-free. Mosques that have been standing for generations and other religious structures are being shut down ostensibly for administrative reasons though affected communities are rarely informed ahead nor provided with alternative places to practice their religious beliefs in congregation. Christian worshippers participating peacefully in a service commemorating six years since renewed conflict in Kachin were deemed unlawful protestors. Christian converts are threatened to revert back to Buddhism and subject to state sanctioned violence. Local Rakhines are threatened and punished for interacting and trading with Muslims. In one instance, a Rakhine woman was publicly humiliated, had her hair shaved, made to wear a sign saying she is a traitor and walk around her village for allegedly selling food to the Muslim camp community that had been blockaded and running out of food.
In the wake of the exodus of over half a million Rohingya individuals and others from northern Rakhine, much debate and analysis have come out regarding who exactly is responsible and can be made responsible for the violence that has caused this massive number of people to flee in just matter of weeks. It has been highlighted over and again how the Constitution is such that the military remains very much in control over the issue of national security and state law and order, with little oversight possible by the so-called civilian part of the Government.
Yet I believe that there is much that can be done by the civilian government. Starting with public messaging that embraces the entire make-up of the Myanmar population, of so many ethnic groups, and of various faiths. Use the show of the inter-faith alliance and solidarity from a few weeks back to combat prejudice and bigotry. Take advantage of the majority in Parliament to strike down laws that are discriminatory to show that all groups in Myanmar have equal rights.

Mr. Chair,
I have found events of past weeks devastating. The reports of villages in northern Rakhine that have been torched and destroyed are of villages that I had personally visited. The people reported to have fled must have included those I have met in my past trips, people who had appealed to me to be given the opportunity to live in peace, to be given the opportunity to work, to move freely to visit friends and family, to have access to doctors and medicine, and to help their children get an education or even simply feed them a proper meal regularly.
Already two weeks before 25 August, an army battalion was flown into Rakhine State to help augment the security there. I then issued a statement expressing concerns of a repetition of the alleged violations which followed the 9 October 2016 attacks. About 87,000 people reportedly fled between last October and August. After the 25 August attacks, almost seven times that number have fled in under two months.

Excellencies,
I will not go into the details of the alleged violations which led to the exodus but would strongly appeal for there to be an honest and impartial accounting of what has happened and for those responsible to answer for their action. Giving access to the Human Rights Council Fact-Finding Mission would be a good start.
My main concern is the current situation of the Rohingya community and what will happen to them next. Genuine implementation of the Kofi Annan Commission's all-encompassing set of recommendations would have gone far in addressing not only the root causes to the cycles of violence in Rakhine State that affect all communities there but also the protracted statelessness of the Rohingya population and decades-long persecution of them.
However with there likely being more of the Rohingya population located in Bangladesh now as compared to Myanmar, I am concerned that only a fraction of them will be allowed back, though all have the right to return. I am also concerned as to how long it might take for the government to ensure that the conditions for their return would be safe and dignified, as well as their being able to rebuild their lives when so much has been destroyed.
I am informed that the Myanmar government has insisted that UNHCR and IOM – expert entities on the issues of statelessness, refugees and voluntary returns – should be excluded from the bilateral discussions regarding the repatriation process. I find this unreasonable and unacceptable.

Distinguished Delegates,
The Rohingya population in Cox's Bazar – who have had their food supply blocked and been starving, been shot at while fleeing, walked for weeks to reach safety, lost family members on the way to refuge, and are now living in plastic sheets – should not be made to meet with stringent requirements if they so wish to return to Myanmar. Citizenship verification should be a different process for them to undergo, voluntarily after consultation once they are home, and not be part of repatriation. Once they return, they must be permitted to return to their place of origin, and not made to live in temporary camps as these camps may not turn out to be temporary as those who were displaced in 2012 have learnt.
Most importantly, the Myanmar government must take steps to let the Rohingya population know that they are welcomed back and that necessary steps will be taken to ensure their safety and protection. Their welfare and well-being and that of the other communities in Rakhine State – including the Rakhine, the Kaman, the Mro, the Hindu, and the Daignet – should be assured equally ahead of efforts to reconcile them and advance on economic development of the region.
Given the critical situation of the Rohingya population and its unlikely resolution in the near future, I ask the General Assembly to remain seized of the situation not just in Rakhine State but for the whole of Myanmar. The duality in Myanmar's government structure to which Mr. Kofi Annan has spoken of does not only have impact in Rakhine State but also in the rest of the country.
I also recommend that the Security Council includes Myanmar as an agenda item, and I hope it passes a strong resolution in due recognition that the crisis in Rakhine State had not only been decades in the making – but has been spilling over, and continues to spill over, beyond Myanmar's borders. For a very long time now this issue has not been simply a domestic affair.

Friends and Colleagues,
I can say without a moment of hesitation that no one would like to see the democratic process of Myanmar derail. At the same time, I cannot erase from my mind the large bright eyes of a young toddler whom I met in Cox's Bazar. He was rescued by his mother after he was thrown into a fire. His eyes were sparkling with hope and eagerness to meet what life has in store for him.
Shouldn't this little boy be given the opportunity to join with others who are part of Myanmar's democratic transition and be able to enjoy his inherent rights?
Time is of the essence ever more so in Myanmar now!
Thank you for your attention.
http://www.rohingyablogger.com/2017/10/statement-by-ms-yanghee-lee-special.html
 
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10:16 AM, October 27, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 10:28 AM, October 27, 2017
Rohingya crisis: US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson calls Myanmar army chief Min Aung Hlaing
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US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urged Myanmar's army chief Thursday, October 27, 2017, to help end the violence in Rakhine state that has forced hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims to flee. This Reuters photo taken on October 26, 2017 shows Rohingya refugees line up to receive humanitarian aid in Balukhali refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
AFP, Washington
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urged Myanmar's army chief Thursday to help end the violence in Rakhine state that has forced hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims to flee.
In a phone call with Min Aung Hlaing, Tillerson expressed "concern about the continuing humanitarian crisis and reported atrocities in Rakhine", according to a statement by State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert.
Also READ: Same old trick
"The Secretary urged Burma's security forces to support the government in ending the violence in Rakhine state and allowing the safe return home of those displaced during this crisis, especially the large numbers of ethnic Rohingya," she added, using Myanmar's former name.

More than 600,000 members of the minority Muslim group have fled across the border into Bangladesh in an intensifying crisis that began in late August.

Militant attacks on Myanmar security forces in Rakhine sparked a major army crackdown on the group, who are labelled illegal Bengali immigrants by most Burmese.

Tillerson, who paid a visit to Myanmar's giant neighbor India earlier this week, urged the military in his phone call to facilitate humanitarian aid for those who have been displaced.

He also told the army to "cooperate with the United Nations to ensure a thorough, independent investigation into all allegations of human rights abuses and violations and to ensure accountability", said the statement.

Washington announced on Monday it was pushing for targeted sanctions against officers from the Mynanmar army involved in violence while withdrawing invitations to senior members of the security forces to visit the US, and ending travel waivers.

The move came after Tillerson had said the US holds Myanmar's military leadership "accountable" for the refugee crisis, drawing a distinction with Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government.

Tillerson warned last week the world won't stand and "be witness to the atrocities that have been reported," adding that the military must be disciplined and "restrained."

Min Aung Hlaing has consistently defended his forces against accusations of having committed atrocities.

"One-sided statements and accusations against Myanmar and security members over the terror attacks of extremist Bengalis in the west of Rakhine State are totally untrue," he said in a post on his Facebook page Tuesday.

Supporters say Rohingyas have been systematically deprived of basic rights over decades in majority Buddhist Myanmar.

In the latest crackdown, Myanmar's security forces have fired indiscriminately on unarmed civilians, including children, and committed widespread sexual violence, according to UN investigators
http://www.thedailystar.net/rohingy...m_medium=newsurl&utm_term=all&utm_content=all

'Rohingya crisis spinning out of control'
Reuters . London | Update: 00:12, Oct 27, 2017
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A combination of escalating violence, worsening health and poor access to conflict zones in Myanmar's Rakhine state is fueling a humanitarian crisis that is "spinning out of control", senior aid officials said on Thursday.

"We've seen a massive increase in violence not just between armed actors but also civilians, which is tearing families apart and leaving people to feel completely abandoned and disenfranchised," Peter Maurer, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

More than 600,000 Rohingya Muslims have crossed the border to neighbouring Bangladesh since Aug. 25, when coordinated Rohingya insurgent attacks on security posts sparked a ferocious counter-offensive by the Myanmar army.

The United Nations says killings, arson and rape carried out by troops and ethnic Rakhine Buddhist mobs amount to a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya.

"I worry that this continued context of fear and violence is spinning out of control and will only lead to displacement of more people," Maurer said.

Myanmar has blocked humanitarian agencies apart from Red Cross organisations from accessing the northern part of Rakhine state in western Myanmar, where the conflict worsened at the end of August.

"Being one of the only actors able to operate in Myanmar presents a considerable challenge in terms of accessing villages and knowing where displaced people are," Maurer said.

"Some of my colleagues have had to walk for six-seven hours to a village, only to find it's been deserted," he said, although he added the Myanmar authorities had recently authorised Red Cross staff to use two helicopters to better track displaced people.

Maurer said high levels of inter-communal violence meant that aid workers were sometimes met with a "mixed reception" by communities and had to take "extreme care to convince people that we are not here to take anyone's side".
'NO END IN SIGHT'
The humanitarian crisis is compounded by a worsening health situation, experts say.

Nipin Gangadharan, Bangladesh country director at aid organisation Action Against Hunger, said refugees arriving in Bangladesh were "taking a longer time to get here because of the constant violence, so their health is deteriorating significantly."

"We're seeing rising levels of malnutrition, particularly among children, and people who survive on one meal a day," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, adding that his organisation was treating malnourished children and providing mental health support to refugees suffering from trauma.

"There's no end in sight to the conflict, so us humanitarian actors are in it for the long run," Gangadharan said.

Maurer shared his view, saying that "we're still in emergency response mode, handing out survival kits, two months after the conflict escalated."
"I fear that's still going to be the case for the next few weeks."
http://en.prothom-alo.com/bangladesh/news/164471/Rohingya-crisis-spinning-out-of-control-Aid
 
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CNN Connect the World
14 September ·
This is the heartbreaking reality facing the Rohingya on the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.
More than 380,000 of them have fled to Bangladesh since late August because of on-going violence in Myanmar.


The Rohingya crisis: UN official ‘very disappointed’ in Suu Kyi
Tribune Desk
Published at 10:08 AM October 27, 2017
Last updated at 10:33 AM October 27, 2017
Rohingya-mohter-carrying-sick-child.jpg

A woman carries her ill child in a refugee camp at Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, September 26, 2017 Reuters
According to UNHCR, at least 604,000 Rohingyas have entered Bangladesh fleeing the violence that erupted in Myanmar on August 25
Yanghee Lee, the United Nations investigator of human rights abuses in Myanmar, has expressed deep disappointment in Aung San Suu Kyi for her indifferent response to the Rohingya crisis.

Speaking to reporters at the United Nations on Thursday, the investigator underscored international frustrations over the behaviour of the state counsellor of Myanmar regarding the persecution of the Rohingya.

Child rights expert Yanghee Lee of South Korea was appointed to her United Nations human rights post in 2014, reports the New York Times.

“Well-documented accounts of killings, rapes, burned villages and forced displacement gets no coverage in Myanmar’s news media,” Lee said while talking about the hatred and hostility against the Rohingyas in Myanmar.

She said: “It has really baffled everyone, and has really baffled me, about Daw Aung’s non-position on this issue.

“She [Suu Kyi] has not ever recognised that there is such a people called Rohingya — that’s a starting point. I’m very disappointed.”

The UN investigator added: “If the Myanmar leader [Suu Kyi] were to reach out to the people and say, ‘Hey, let’s show some humanity,’ I think people will follow her — she’s adored by the public.”

“Unfortunately, there seems to be little sympathy, let alone empathy, for the Rohingya people in Myanmar,” Lee said. “For decades, it has been cultivated in the minds of the Myanmar people that the Rohingya are not indigenous to the country and therefore have no rights whatsoever to which they can apparently claim.”

Suu Kyi skipped the annual United Nations General Assembly in September what was widely viewed as a way to avoid hard questions and confrontations over the Rohingya crisis.

She was criticised by other leaders, including some fellow Nobel laureates, for her response towards the torture on the Rohingyas in her country.
Also Read- Suu Kyi claims military operation stopped two weeks back
According to United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHCR), at least 604,000 Rohingyas have entered Bangladesh fleeing the violence that erupted in Myanmar on August 25.

Myanmar’s de-facto leader last month publicly addressed concerns over the deadly conflict in Rakhine State, highlighting her government’s commitment to restore peace, stability and rule of law in the region scarred by armed conflict between insurgents – the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) – and security forces.

Without mentioning the word Rohingya, she said carefully-worded lines of condemnation, saying that Myanmar has “never been soft on human rights”.

Earlier, on August 29, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that satellite data accessed by the rights body had revealed widespread fires burning in at least 10 areas in Rakhine State, where local residents and activists have accused soldiers of shooting indiscriminately at unarmed Rohingya men, women, and children, and carrying out arson attacks.

Myanmar authorities, on the other hand, claim that Rohingya “extremist terrorists” have been setting these fires during fights with government troops. Human Rights Watch reports they could not obtain any comments on this issue from any government spokesperson.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/2017/10/27/rohingya-crisis-un-official-disappointed-suu-kyi/
 
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