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Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing - Updates & Discussions

Rohingya is a lost cause. No one wants to fight on their behalf. They are acting like the Afghan refugees who came to Pakistan.
Not sure about that... Looks like deals were made with Arakan Army. Nobody wants any ethnic friction in Arakan which will benefit MM army thugs. So the support will go to Arakan Army in return they will live peacefully with Rohingyas.
 
Krishna Thapa (the commentor) was an Indian plantation slaves in Malaysia.. I am sure Rohingyas are creating hard competition for those lowest throng in Malaysia.
Krishna thappa is not the commentator.

The man who commented is a Malaysian muslim and he was replying to Krishna thappa so he tagged him.

As you can see I blurred the commentators name.

@TopCat
 
As I mentioned above that Krishna Thappa is not the commentator. I blurred the commentators name.
If not then they are Burmese or Indian bots taking a muslim name to create disturbances. Huge Indian BJP whatsapp university bots are all over in the commenting sections in youtube and other news site.
 
UN warns of ‘further war crimes’ in Rakhine
Agence France-Presse . Geneva
Published: 19:29, Sep 14,2020
| Updated: 00:43, Sep 15,2020







116234_114.jpg

In this file photo taken on September 7, 2017, a house burns in Gawdu Tharya village near Maungdaw in Rakhine state in northern Myanmar. - AFP photo
Myanmar’s apparent continued targeting of civilians in the country’s Rakhine and Chin states could constitute additional war crimes and crimes against humanity, the UN rights chief said Monday.
Michelle Bachelet demanded action to remedy the serious rights violations suffered by Myanmar’s Rohingya minority in particular.

Military operations in 2017 forced some 7,50,000 Rohingya to flee from conflict-torn Rakhine state to Bangladesh in violence that now sees Myanmar facing genocide charges at the UN’s top court.
Speaking at the opening of the 45th Human Rights Council in Geneva, Bachelet decried that the abuses against the Rohingya and other minorities in the country were on-going.

‘People from the Rakhine, Chin, Mro, Daignet and Rohingya communities are increasingly affected by the armed conflict in Rakhine and Chin States,’ Bachelet said.

She pointed to ‘disappearances and extra-judicial killings of civilians; massive civilian displacement; arbitrary arrests, torture and deaths in custody; and the destruction of civilian property.’
‘Civilian casualties have also been increasing. In some cases, they appear to have been targeted or attacked indiscriminately, which may constitute further war crimes or even crimes against humanity,’ she said.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights lamented that no concrete measures had been taken by the government towards accountability for the ‘terrible human rights crisis’ inflicted upon the Rohingya by the military operations in Rakhine which started three years ago.

Bachelet said government administrators were now reclassifying areas where Rohingya villages were previously located, removing the names of villages from official maps and potentially altering how the land may be used.

‘This should end immediately, and the prior situation should be restored,’ she said.

Satellite images and eye-witness accounts indicate that areas in northern Rakhine have been burnt in recent months — something contested by the government, Bachelet added.

‘This only underscores the need for independent, on-the-ground investigation,’ she said.
Myanmar’s military has always justified its 2017 operations as a means to root out Rohingya militants after attacks against around a dozen security posts and police stations.

The Rohingya are widely seen as illegal immigrants in Myanmar, denied citizenship and rights.
Bachelet highlighted that most Rohingya will not be able to vote in the forthcoming November elections, branding the situation as ‘disappointing’.

‘The vast majority of Rohingya will be prevented from participating in the elections, since they have effectively been stripped of their previously recognised rights to vote and stand for office,’ she said.
‘Action must now be taken to properly remedy the serious violations the Rohingya have suffered, and include them into the life of their country.

‘I also encourage the government to remove the barriers that impede democratic freedoms and undermine the equal enjoyment of human rights by all in Myanmar.’

 
BGB on alert
Shahidul Islam Chowdhury |
Published: 00:51, Sep 16,2020

Myanmar military has resumed crackdown in villages of Rohingya Muslim community in Rakhine adjacent to south-eastern border with Bangladesh spreading panic across the Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazar.


At least 400 Myanmar troops, on early Tuesday, launched an operation in village Gwa Son of Maungdaw township and arrested five Rohingya men, officials with knowledge of the matter told New Age.

The troops searched houses of Rohingya Muslim families of village Tha Yet Oke of Maungdaw township.

In absence of the male members of the family in the houses at Gwa Son, the troops on Sunday took away three Rohingya women to unknown places.

The locations of the operations were opposite the bordering Domdomia and Jadipara areas in Teknaf of Cox’s bazar in Bangladesh, said an official.

Border Guard Bangladesh has kept troops on alert along the border sensing troops’ movement inside Rakhine and risk of resumption of intrusions of people from the Myanmar side.

‘We are absolutely ready in all border outposts and our patrolling has also been intensified,’ Lieutenant Colonel Ali Haider Azad Ahmed, commanding officer of BGB 34 Battalion, told New Age on Tuesday evening.

‘We will not allow any new intrusion,’ he said.

Several Bangladesh officials deployed in Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazar said on Tuesday that members of the Rohingya community, who had been forcibly displaced by Myanmar military since August 2017 were now living in temporary shelters inside Bangladesh, were worried after getting news from their relatives still staying in Rakhine about the resumption of crackdown on the minority community living in different villages.

The camp managements have asked camp leaders, who are Rohingyas themselves, to stay alert about the activities and movements essential for maintaining calmness in the camps.

Home minister Asaduzzaman Khan told reporters on Tuesday that the government ‘is at the ready to tackle any situation’.

Myanmar’s military set a village on fire in Rakhine State’s Kyauktaw township and killed two civilians in the evening on September 3, according to Irrawaddy.com

Troops shelled village Phayapaung on the Yangon-Sittwe road before torching houses and killing two villagers, according to relatives of the victims.

‘My son was returning from work in Kyauktaw by bike at around 5:00pm when he encountered Tatmadaw [military] troops. They told him to lead them to the village. An explosion occurred near the village following which the troops attacked,’ said Nyo Maung Hla, father of 27-year-old victim Ko Maung Nyunt Win.

Military trucks came from the direction of Kyauktaw and surrounded the village. Villagers were told to leave their homes as soldiers looted their belongings before setting their houses ablaze, said Nyo Maung Hla.

The Bangladesh government on September 13 summoned Myanmar ambassador to Bangladesh Aung Kyaw Moe and protested at the visible movement of Myanmar military fishing trawlers at places very close to the border of the two countries.

Foreign minister director general for Myanmar wing Delwar Hossain confirmed that ambassador Moe was called to the foreign ministry for handing over a diplomatic note protesting against the suspicious movements of Myanmar troops.

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said on September 14 that recent civilian casualties in Myanmar may amount to ‘further war crimes’ and that three years after an exodus of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar, no concrete measures to hold Myanmar accountable had been taken.

Satellite images and eyewitness accounts indicated that areas of northern Rakhine were burnt in recent months and called for an independent investigation, Bachelet told the Human Rights Council in Geneva, according to AFP.

Bangladesh and Myanmar signed instruments to send some 860,000 Rohingyas, mostly women, children and aged people, to their home in Rakhine, as most of them entered Bangladesh fleeing unbridled murder, arson and rape during ‘security operations’ by Myanmar military in Rakhine, what the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing and genocide, beginning from August 25, 2017.

The latest Rohingya influx took the number of undocumented Myanmar nationals and registered refugees in Bangladesh to over 1.2 million, according to estimates by UN agencies and Bangladesh foreign ministry.

 
BGB on alert
Shahidul Islam Chowdhury |
Published: 00:51, Sep 16,2020

Myanmar military has resumed crackdown in villages of Rohingya Muslim community in Rakhine adjacent to south-eastern border with Bangladesh spreading panic across the Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazar.


At least 400 Myanmar troops, on early Tuesday, launched an operation in village Gwa Son of Maungdaw township and arrested five Rohingya men, officials with knowledge of the matter told New Age.

The troops searched houses of Rohingya Muslim families of village Tha Yet Oke of Maungdaw township.

In absence of the male members of the family in the houses at Gwa Son, the troops on Sunday took away three Rohingya women to unknown places.

The locations of the operations were opposite the bordering Domdomia and Jadipara areas in Teknaf of Cox’s bazar in Bangladesh, said an official.

Border Guard Bangladesh has kept troops on alert along the border sensing troops’ movement inside Rakhine and risk of resumption of intrusions of people from the Myanmar side.

‘We are absolutely ready in all border outposts and our patrolling has also been intensified,’ Lieutenant Colonel Ali Haider Azad Ahmed, commanding officer of BGB 34 Battalion, told New Age on Tuesday evening.

‘We will not allow any new intrusion,’ he said.

Several Bangladesh officials deployed in Rohingya camps in Cox’s Bazar said on Tuesday that members of the Rohingya community, who had been forcibly displaced by Myanmar military since August 2017 were now living in temporary shelters inside Bangladesh, were worried after getting news from their relatives still staying in Rakhine about the resumption of crackdown on the minority community living in different villages.

The camp managements have asked camp leaders, who are Rohingyas themselves, to stay alert about the activities and movements essential for maintaining calmness in the camps.

Home minister Asaduzzaman Khan told reporters on Tuesday that the government ‘is at the ready to tackle any situation’.

Myanmar’s military set a village on fire in Rakhine State’s Kyauktaw township and killed two civilians in the evening on September 3, according to Irrawaddy.com

Troops shelled village Phayapaung on the Yangon-Sittwe road before torching houses and killing two villagers, according to relatives of the victims.

‘My son was returning from work in Kyauktaw by bike at around 5:00pm when he encountered Tatmadaw [military] troops. They told him to lead them to the village. An explosion occurred near the village following which the troops attacked,’ said Nyo Maung Hla, father of 27-year-old victim Ko Maung Nyunt Win.

Military trucks came from the direction of Kyauktaw and surrounded the village. Villagers were told to leave their homes as soldiers looted their belongings before setting their houses ablaze, said Nyo Maung Hla.

The Bangladesh government on September 13 summoned Myanmar ambassador to Bangladesh Aung Kyaw Moe and protested at the visible movement of Myanmar military fishing trawlers at places very close to the border of the two countries.

Foreign minister director general for Myanmar wing Delwar Hossain confirmed that ambassador Moe was called to the foreign ministry for handing over a diplomatic note protesting against the suspicious movements of Myanmar troops.

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said on September 14 that recent civilian casualties in Myanmar may amount to ‘further war crimes’ and that three years after an exodus of Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar, no concrete measures to hold Myanmar accountable had been taken.

Satellite images and eyewitness accounts indicated that areas of northern Rakhine were burnt in recent months and called for an independent investigation, Bachelet told the Human Rights Council in Geneva, according to AFP.

Bangladesh and Myanmar signed instruments to send some 860,000 Rohingyas, mostly women, children and aged people, to their home in Rakhine, as most of them entered Bangladesh fleeing unbridled murder, arson and rape during ‘security operations’ by Myanmar military in Rakhine, what the United Nations denounced as ethnic cleansing and genocide, beginning from August 25, 2017.

The latest Rohingya influx took the number of undocumented Myanmar nationals and registered refugees in Bangladesh to over 1.2 million, according to estimates by UN agencies and Bangladesh foreign ministry.


Hope Myanmar burns and corona take overs for that shit land.
 
Rest of the Muslim world is sleeping

The princes are living in big mansions

Abandoned their religion and the ummah

As Pakistani I hope we never abandon our religion and the ummah, if we have a army of 1,000 left still we should fight

Because Pakistan was a country made for Muslims by Muslims, if there was no Islam we would never have made a Pakistan

As long as one person stands there is hope, and I hope that change comes from Pakistan only by the will of Allah swt

Arabs used to look down on Kurds and when Saladin wanted to free Jerusalem they used to laugh, a Kurd freeing the holy lands they used to say

Saladin wiped out the entire combined army’s of Europe while Arabs watched on

After 1,000 years everyone knows Saladin no one remembers the caliphs of that time

It’s happened before and I hope after 1,000 people remember Pakistan

Didn't the dream die partly in 1971 when you could not accomodate East Pakistanis ?
 
China decided to help us in this crisis by offering us to return the Royhinga's to Myanmar fully
 

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