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Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing - Updates & Discussions

For decades Pakistan had ignored this issue and concentrated all attention to Kashmir. But what we have been doing post-72 is sheer criminal negligence. We have denied our future generations a sure potential for peace, prosperity and security. We are paying for this and will pay dearly in the days to come. The indications are clear.
 
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UN names fact-finding mission members
SAM Staff, May 31, 2017
un-mission-1.jpg

Sri Lankan lawyer and human rights veteran Radhika Coomaraswamy (Right), pictured here in 2009, will join a three-member UN fact-finding mission. / Reuters

The UN named a trio of independent experts on Tuesday to investigate widespread allegations of killings, rape and torture by Burma’s security forces against Rohingya Muslims in Arakan State.

The international fact-finding mission will be chaired by Indira Jaising, an advocate of the Supreme Court of India, the president of the UN Human Rights Council said in a statement.

The mission will seek access to Burma, where the army last week rejected allegations of abuses during a crackdown last year which forced some 75,000 Rohingya to flee to neighboring Bangladesh. The UN urged the government to “fully cooperate” by making available the findings of its domestic investigations and by “granting full, unrestricted and unmonitored access”.

The two other members are Radhika Coomaraswamy, a human rights veteran and lawyer from Sri Lanka, and Australian activist Christopher Sidoti, said the U.N. statement, issued after private consultations within the 47-member state forum.

The Council agreed to set up the fact-finding mission last March in a resolution strongly condemning violations and calling for ensuring “full accountability for perpetrators and justice for victims.”

A UN report in February said Burma’s security forces had committed mass killings and gang rapes in a campaign that “very likely” amounted to crimes against humanity and possibly ethnic cleansing. The report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights was based on extensive interviews with Rohingya survivors in Bangladesh.

Both Burma’s de facto leader State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and Burma’s military commander-in-chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing have rejected the team of experts.

In her State of the Union address last month Daw Aung Suu Kyi said she did not accept a fact-finding mission into Arakan State. “It does not mean we disrespect the UN,” she added, “it is just that it does not correspond with our country’s [situation].”

On the occasion of the 72nd Anniversary of Armed Forces Day last month, Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing reiterated that the Rohingya population did not belong to Burma, but were interlopers from Bangladesh—and that any international political intervention on the pretext of assisting refugees from this community would threaten Burma’s sovereignty.

Last week, more than 50 civil society groups in Burma urged the government to fully cooperate with the fact finding mission, claiming it would “foster a rule-of law culture.” Last month, 23 international organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and Fortify Rights, called on overseas governments to engage Burmese authorities in allowing unfettered access to the UN fact-finding mission.

SOURCE REUTERS
 
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UN names fact-finding mission members
SAM Staff, May 31, 2017
un-mission-1.jpg

Sri Lankan lawyer and human rights veteran Radhika Coomaraswamy (Right), pictured here in 2009, will join a three-member UN fact-finding mission. / Reuters

The UN named a trio of independent experts on Tuesday to investigate widespread allegations of killings, rape and torture by Burma’s security forces against Rohingya Muslims in Arakan State.

The international fact-finding mission will be chaired by Indira Jaising, an advocate of the Supreme Court of India, the president of the UN Human Rights Council said in a statement.

The mission will seek access to Burma, where the army last week rejected allegations of abuses during a crackdown last year which forced some 75,000 Rohingya to flee to neighboring Bangladesh. The UN urged the government to “fully cooperate” by making available the findings of its domestic investigations and by “granting full, unrestricted and unmonitored access”.

The two other members are Radhika Coomaraswamy, a human rights veteran and lawyer from Sri Lanka, and Australian activist Christopher Sidoti, said the U.N. statement, issued after private consultations within the 47-member state forum.

The Council agreed to set up the fact-finding mission last March in a resolution strongly condemning violations and calling for ensuring “full accountability for perpetrators and justice for victims.”

A UN report in February said Burma’s security forces had committed mass killings and gang rapes in a campaign that “very likely” amounted to crimes against humanity and possibly ethnic cleansing. The report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights was based on extensive interviews with Rohingya survivors in Bangladesh.

Both Burma’s de facto leader State Counselor Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and Burma’s military commander-in-chief Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing have rejected the team of experts.

In her State of the Union address last month Daw Aung Suu Kyi said she did not accept a fact-finding mission into Arakan State. “It does not mean we disrespect the UN,” she added, “it is just that it does not correspond with our country’s [situation].”

On the occasion of the 72nd Anniversary of Armed Forces Day last month, Snr-Gen Min Aung Hlaing reiterated that the Rohingya population did not belong to Burma, but were interlopers from Bangladesh—and that any international political intervention on the pretext of assisting refugees from this community would threaten Burma’s sovereignty.

Last week, more than 50 civil society groups in Burma urged the government to fully cooperate with the fact finding mission, claiming it would “foster a rule-of law culture.” Last month, 23 international organizations including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and Fortify Rights, called on overseas governments to engage Burmese authorities in allowing unfettered access to the UN fact-finding mission.

SOURCE REUTERS

Another B/S bakwas to procrastinate a fair resolution. Meanwhile more Rohingyas will be slaughtered.
 
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Rohingya camps in Bangladesh destroyed by Cyclone Mora
Tropical storm leaves Bangladesh flooded and thousands of Rohingya refugees 'without a roof'.




At least seven people have died and 50 others injured by Cyclone Mora that has also left thousands of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh waiting for help after a night in the rain.

Bangladesh's border region, home to around 12,000 Rohingya refugees that fled Myanmar, faced the brunt of the storm. It struck the island of Saint Martin and Teknaf in the coastal district of Cox's Bazar, where officials said some 200,000 people were evacuated to shelters.

In Chittagong district, about 150,000 people were evacuated.
Shamsul Alam, a Rohingya community leader, told Reuters news agency the damage in the camps was severe with almost all 10,000 thatched huts in the Balukhali and Kutupalong camps destroyed.

"Most of the temporary houses in the camps have been flattened," Alam said.

The Bangladesh government estimates there are more than 300,000 Rohingya in the country. The Rohingya are a Muslim minority shunned by Myanmar's Buddhist majority.

"We heard that a cyclone was coming. But there's no place we can go," 27-year-old Hamida Begum, who said she fled to Bangladesh three months ago after her husband disappeared, told Reuters on Wednesday.

927881de006346fb874160b9e2031a8d_18.jpg

Rohingya refugees face increased risk of disease due to lack of sanitation facilities [AFP]
"I hate being a Rohingya. We are being tortured in Myanmar. Now in Bangladesh, we have no rights. Nothing. After this cyclone, we don't have a roof. We are living under the sky. We have no future."

Authorities had evacuated more than 400,000 people from the low-lying border districts before the storm. However, most of the Rohingya refugees remained in their makeshift shelters when the storm struck.

"There's no roof. We are just drinking water. The little food we had in our home was all damaged after the cyclone," said Setara Begum, a mother of two, including a five-month old.

"My children are crying for food. I am helpless. I have no money. There's no hope. I don't know how I will raise my children."

Deaths as Cyclone Roanu pounds Bangladesh


Beyond the camps, officials were also assessing the damage elsewhere. The chief administrator said 17,500 houses had been destroyed and 35,000 partially damaged in the district.

"After the storm, there's an acute crisis of food, shelter, health services, water and sanitation facilities in the makeshift settlements," said Sanjukta Sahany, local head of the International Organization for Migration which coordinates relief in some of the camps.

There were also pockets of damage in the broader community, but no reports of casualties, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

Omar Farukh, a community leader in Kutupalong camp - one of several camps for Rohingya in Cox's Bazar - described the misery of those left behind.

"We have passed a difficult time. We had no tin or plastic sheets above our heads, and almost all of us passed the night in the rain," Farukh told Reuters by telephone.

"We tried to save our belongings, whatever we have, with pieces of plastic sheet," he said before adding agency officials visited the Kutupalong camp to see what was needed.

Al Jazeera’s Tanvir Chowdhury, reporting from Kutupalong camp, said authorities and NGOs were not present in the camp and refugees had to repair the damage themselves.

"They are left on their own," he said.

109cf9d2121d412ba9078aa11ef7624b_6.jpg

Path of Cyclone Mora through Rohingya refugee camps [AFP]
Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies
 
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For decades Pakistan had ignored this issue and concentrated all attention to Kashmir. But what we have been doing post-72 is sheer criminal negligence. We have denied our future generations a sure potential for peace, prosperity and security. We are paying for this and will pay dearly in the days to come. The indications are clear.
Pakistan has given humanitarian help to the Burma refugees. We have also helped the suffering people in Burma financially.
But indeed, we have not done what we should have rather we have intensified our military cooperation by supplying them arms. Pakistan must correct its course and take practical actions against the criminal government and military of Myanmar rather than give out statements and show sympathy.
 
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Myanmar State Counselor meets with senior Chinese military official
SAM Staff, June 4, 2017
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State Counselor of Myanmar Aung San Suu Kyi (R) meets with General Fang Fenghui (L), member of China’s Central Military Commission (CMC) and chief of the CMC’s Joint Staff Department, in Nay Pyi Taw, capital of Myanmar, June 1, 2017. (mod.gov.cn/Zhu Min)
Myanmar State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi met with General Fang Fenghui, member of China’s Central Military Commission (CMC) and chief of the Joint Staff Department under the CMC on June 1 in Nay Pyi Taw.

Aung San Suu Kyi said that she has met with Chinese President Xi Jinping for times and they have reached a number of consensuses on developing bilateral relations.

Myanmar attaches great importance to and takes active part in the Belt and Road Initiative, many major cooperative projects between the two countries have achieved good results for the economic development of Myanmar, she said.

Myanmar is willing to strengthen cooperation in various fields with China, she said.

The state counselor mentioned that China had played a positive role in the success of the 21st Century Panglong Peace Conference and Myanmar is willing to work with China to jointly safeguard the peace and stability in their border areas.

Fang Fenghui said that under the joint promotion of President Xi and Suu Kyi, the political mutual trust between the two countries has been strengthened, economic cooperation enhanced, cultural exchanges deepened and military cooperation expanded.

China and Myanmar have mutual support on a number of major issues, and the win-win cooperation between the two sides has proved to be fruitful, Fang added.

The Chinese military is willing to strengthen cooperation with the Myanmar military in areas of high-level exchanges, personnel training, joint drilling, anti-terrorism and equipment technology, so as to play an active role in promoting the all-round development of bilateral relations, Fang said.

First Vice President of Myanmar Myint Swe and Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, commander-in-chief of Myanmar Defense Services, held talks respectively with General Fang Fenghui on the same day.

http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/0...selor-meets-senior-chinese-military-official/
 
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Rohingya camps in Bangladesh destroyed by Cyclone Mora
Tropical storm leaves Bangladesh flooded and thousands of Rohingya refugees 'without a roof'.




At least seven people have died and 50 others injured by Cyclone Mora that has also left thousands of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh waiting for help after a night in the rain.

Bangladesh's border region, home to around 12,000 Rohingya refugees that fled Myanmar, faced the brunt of the storm. It struck the island of Saint Martin and Teknaf in the coastal district of Cox's Bazar, where officials said some 200,000 people were evacuated to shelters.

In Chittagong district, about 150,000 people were evacuated.
Shamsul Alam, a Rohingya community leader, told Reuters news agency the damage in the camps was severe with almost all 10,000 thatched huts in the Balukhali and Kutupalong camps destroyed.

"Most of the temporary houses in the camps have been flattened," Alam said.

The Bangladesh government estimates there are more than 300,000 Rohingya in the country. The Rohingya are a Muslim minority shunned by Myanmar's Buddhist majority.

"We heard that a cyclone was coming. But there's no place we can go," 27-year-old Hamida Begum, who said she fled to Bangladesh three months ago after her husband disappeared, told Reuters on Wednesday.

927881de006346fb874160b9e2031a8d_18.jpg

Rohingya refugees face increased risk of disease due to lack of sanitation facilities [AFP]
"I hate being a Rohingya. We are being tortured in Myanmar. Now in Bangladesh, we have no rights. Nothing. After this cyclone, we don't have a roof. We are living under the sky. We have no future."

Authorities had evacuated more than 400,000 people from the low-lying border districts before the storm. However, most of the Rohingya refugees remained in their makeshift shelters when the storm struck.

"There's no roof. We are just drinking water. The little food we had in our home was all damaged after the cyclone," said Setara Begum, a mother of two, including a five-month old.

"My children are crying for food. I am helpless. I have no money. There's no hope. I don't know how I will raise my children."

Deaths as Cyclone Roanu pounds Bangladesh


Beyond the camps, officials were also assessing the damage elsewhere. The chief administrator said 17,500 houses had been destroyed and 35,000 partially damaged in the district.

"After the storm, there's an acute crisis of food, shelter, health services, water and sanitation facilities in the makeshift settlements," said Sanjukta Sahany, local head of the International Organization for Migration which coordinates relief in some of the camps.

There were also pockets of damage in the broader community, but no reports of casualties, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

Omar Farukh, a community leader in Kutupalong camp - one of several camps for Rohingya in Cox's Bazar - described the misery of those left behind.

"We have passed a difficult time. We had no tin or plastic sheets above our heads, and almost all of us passed the night in the rain," Farukh told Reuters by telephone.

"We tried to save our belongings, whatever we have, with pieces of plastic sheet," he said before adding agency officials visited the Kutupalong camp to see what was needed.

Al Jazeera’s Tanvir Chowdhury, reporting from Kutupalong camp, said authorities and NGOs were not present in the camp and refugees had to repair the damage themselves.

"They are left on their own," he said.

109cf9d2121d412ba9078aa11ef7624b_6.jpg

Path of Cyclone Mora through Rohingya refugee camps [AFP]
Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies

Some footage of the destruction


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Human Rights Watch defends Muslims praying in public
SAM Staff, June 6, 2017
myanmar-HRW.jpg

Security forces in front of a madrassa in Thaketa Township after nationalists sealed off the religious school. / Myo Min Soe / The Irrawaddy
Human Rights Watch on Monday called for the Myanmar government to overrule local officials in Rangoon who are threatening to charge Muslims for holding Ramadan prayers in a public space.

On May 31, about 50 Muslims worshipped near a shuttered Islamic school in Thaketa Township, one of two madrassas in the area that were shut down by a ultranationalist mob on April 28. It is unclear when they will reopen.

In a statement on June 1, township authorities warned Muslims from the group they would take action under Article 133 of Myanmar ’s Penal Code for praying in public without official permission, as it said the prayers blocked the road and threatened “stability and the rule of law.”

Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch (HRW)’s Asia Division, said: “ward-level officials’ threats to charge and prosecute Muslims” who took part in the prayer session on May 31 was “further evidence of the Myanmar government’s failure to protect religious freedoms.”

“Since that day, local police and ward officials in Yangon have been consistently harassing and threatening members of the Muslim community with criminal charges and fines because they dared assemble in the street to hold prayers during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan,” he said.

“These actions by local officials are an outrage that should be urgently overruled by senior leaders in the General Administration Department, or failing that, the minister of home affairs. If the ministry refuses to act within days to cease these threats of charges, then as de facto head of government, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi should step in to protect freedom of conscience and religion,” he added.

Robertson said mosques and madrassas that have been forcibly shuttered should be “immediately re-opened.”

“Religious believers should not be threatened or criminally charged simply for exercising their fundamental right to observe and practice their religion,” he said.

Local Muslims told The Irrawaddy that they do not have enough places to pray. Township authorities were unavailable for comment on Monday.

http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/06/06/human-rights-watch-defends-muslims-praying-public/
 
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Canada must demand human rights for Rohingya in Myanmar
Aung San Suu Kyi, who was honoured by Canada for her own courage and determination during 15 years of imprisonment under the despotism of Burma’s previous military rulers, has refused to speak up for her country’s Rohingya minority for fear of antagonizing Buddhist nationalists.
aung-san-suu-kyi.jpg.size.custom.crop.1086x722.jpg
Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi is seen in Feburary during the Panglong Peace Talk with ethnic representatives to mark 70th anniversary of Myanmar Union Day in Panglong town, Southern Shan State, Myanmar. Myanmar's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi travels to Canada this week to consult with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on constitutional reforms. (AUNG HTET / AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
By PETER GOODSPEED
Tues., June 6, 2017

It is time Canada spoke some harsh brutal truths to Aung San Suu Kyi, the de facto leader of Myanmar (also known as Burma) and one of only six honorary Canadian citizens.

The Nobel Peace Laureate, who has long been regarded as the female Asian equivalent of Nelson Mandela, is in Canada this week to meet Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to get some tips on federalism and constitutional reform.

But the top agenda item on any and every meeting she has in this country should be her government’s persecution and near genocidal treatment of Burma’s Rohingya Muslim minority.

Since her National League for Democracy won a crushing majority in national elections in Burma in November 2015, Aung San Suu Kyi has done virtually nothing to help the Rohingya people, who, for decades, have been widely described as the “most persecuted people on Earth.”

In fact, since last October, Burma’s NLD-led government has waged a brutal security “clearance operation” in Burma’s Rakhine State that has led to the killing of hundreds of Rohingya people and the forced the displacement of more than 30,000 others. Dozens of Rohingya villages have been burned, women raped, civilians arbitrarily arrested and children killed.

Last December, a dozen other Nobel Peace Laureates signed an open letter to the UN Security Council that warned the crisis in Burma is a tragedy “amounting to ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.”

This March, the UN office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights issued an urgent report that said the most recent abuses in Burma may amount to crimes against humanity.

“While discrimination against the Rohingya has been endemic for decades, the recent level of violence is unprecedented,” the report said.
https://www.thestar.com/opinion/com...and-human-rights-for-rohingya-in-myanmar.html

Suu Kyi, Trudeau talk federalism for Myanmar
SAM Staff, June 9, 2017
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Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi meets with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Ottawa, Ontario, on June 7, 2017. Photo: Lars Hagberg/AFP

Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi sat down with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Wednesday to learn about Canadian federalism, a system of government she believes could bring stability to her nation.

“I’m happy to be here, particularly to study the federalism of Canada because it is where we’re trying to go. We’re trying to build up a democratic federal union,” the Nobel laureate said.

“We have some ways to go before we become a working democratic federal nation such as yours,” she added, turning to Trudeau in his parliamentary office. “But I’m sure we’ll get there.”

Canada is among several Western nations supporting democratic reforms in Myanmar.

Suu Kyi’s trip to Canada follows a fresh round of peace talks in the capital Naypyidaw aimed at ending a conflict in Myanmar’s troubled frontier regions, where various ethnic groups have been waging war against the state for almost seven decades.

Summit delegates considered what shape a federal union might take. The idea is still in its infancy.

Trudeau offered condolences on behalf of Canada for the loss of a Myanmar military aircraft carrying 106 passengers — soldiers and their families — and 14 crew.

He also said after their talk that he “encouraged Myanmar to accelerate its efforts to uphold human rights, particularly with respect to women, youth, and protecting ethnic and religious minorities, including the Rohingya.”

Trudeau also announced Can$8.8 million in aid to support the peace process and to provide emergency food assistance, shelter and health care to vulnerable populations.

SOURCE AFP

http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/06/09/suu-kyi-trudeau-talk-federalism-myanmar/
 
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Myanmar's Suu Kyi says UN Rohingya probe would increase tensions
Editor-June 12, 2017 Reuters Agency

"We did not feel it was in keeping with the needs of the region in which we are trying to establish harmony and understanding, and to remove the fears that have kept the two communities apart for so long."

The 71-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner has said she would only accept recommendations from a separate advisory commission led by former U.N. chief Kofi Annan.

"I think we should really give the commission a chance to show whether or not they have done their work properly instead of condemning from the beginning," she said.

A U.N. report in February said Myanmar's security forces had committed mass killings and gang rapes in a campaign that "very likely" amounted to crimes against humanity and possibly ethnic cleansing.

The report by the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights was based on extensive interviews with Rohingya survivors in Bangladesh.

About 75,000 Rohingya fled from Myanmar's Rakhine State to Bangladesh to escape a military crackdown last year launched after nine policemen were killed in attacks that Myanmar blamed on Rohingya militants.

More than 200,000 Rohingya had already fled to Bangladesh, many living in official and makeshift camps, straining resources in one of Asia's poorest regions.

Muslims protest closure of religious schools in Myanmar
Muslim residents in Myanmar’s largest city Wednesday protested the closure of their two religious schools as they have fewer place for worship in the month of Ramadan -- the ninth and holiest month of the Islamic lunar calendar.Local authorities -- following negotiations with local Muslim leaders -- chained shut two madrasahs in Yangon city on April 28 after a mob led by ultra-nationalist Buddhist monks demanded an immediate closure of religious schools in the area.

On Wednesday evening, some 100 Muslims gathered on the street in front of one of the two madrasahs to pray and protest the closure as the madrasahs stayed closed until now though the authorities said it was just temporary.Tin Shwe, the head of the madrasah, told Anadolu Agency that authorities also barred Muslim residents from worshiping in six other schools in Thakayta Township without giving any proper reasons.“We requested them to let us worship in these schools during Ramadan.

But it went unanswered,” he said on Wednesday.He added local Muslims were performing prayer at their individual places such as houses and shops since the ban.“This is not the way we should perform prayers, especially in the month of Ramadan,” said Tin Shwe, adding the closest mosque was about a 45-minute walk away.Min Naung, a 32-year-old Muslim resident of Thakayta, who joined the protest, said he has worshiped in the schools since he was a child.

“This is the first time we are not able to gather during the Ramadan month,” he told Anadolu Agency after the street prayer.“The ban makes us shocked,” he said.New York-based Human Rights Watch earlier this month said the closure was "the latest government failure to protect country’s religious minorities".

"The government should immediately reverse these closures, end restrictions on the practice of minority religions, and prosecute Buddhist ultra-nationalists who break the law in the name of religion," said HRW’s deputy Asia director, Phil Robertson. HRW said Myanmar government has placed opaque and onerous restrictions on the construction or renovation of religious structures, as well as limits on the practice of religion, elements of the systemic discrimination facing Muslims, including the ethnic Rohingya Muslims in western Rakhine State.

Anti-Muslim movements have been on the rise in predominantly Buddhist Myanmar since an outbreak in communal violence in the western Rakhine state in 2012.

http://www.yenisafak.com/en/world/m...ohingya-probe-would-increase-tensions-2717207
 
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Shadowy rebels extend Myanmar’s wars
The little-known Arakan Army, one of the country's newest insurgent outfits, is responsible for rising violence in the country's remote western regions

By DAVID SCOTT MATHIESON YANGON, JUNE 11, 2017 1:49 PM
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Myanmar solders patrol the streets at Thapyuchai village, outside of Thandwe in the Rakhine State. Photo: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun
The stirring soundtrack of the video ‘Dream in Our Heart’ is accompanied by statements of defiance by ethnic Rakhine soldiers, male and female, of the Arakan Army (AA) from their mountain redoubt in Myanmar’s northern Kachin State.

Army commander Major General Twan Mrat Naing (aka Tun Myat Naing) speaks to the camera: “Our message to Naypyidaw and Burmese army is we will never ever give up, we will fight until we achieve our objective.”

That objective, articulated in the video widely distributed online, is the total liberation of Myanmar’s Rakhine State from “Burmese fascism” and the Myanmar army which has long occupied Rakhine State and oppressed its people.

The little known Arakan Army is unique in that as one of Myanmar’s smallest ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) still fighting the central government, it operates in four ethnic states at either end of this large country: far from ‘home’ in Kachin and northern Shan States, and in the west in the borderlands of Chin and Rakhine State, where many of the groups fighters hail from.

Formed in April 2009, the AA’s central aims are self-determination for the Arakan people, to safeguard national identity and cultural heritage and promote ‘national’ dignity. Its political wing, the United League of Arakan (ULA), was formed soon after the militant wing.

The army partly formed as a response to widespread frustration amongst young Rakhine with the largely moribund Arakan Liberation Party/Army (ALP/A) and its political wing based on the Thailand-Myanmar border, which only ever operated alongside the large Karen National Liberation Army (KNLA) and not for many years in Rakhine State.

The ALP signed the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement in October 2015, and some of its members have voiced support for the AA and condemned allegations of Myanmar army abuses against its supporters.

Most international understanding of ethnic Rakhine grievances stem from the long persecution of Rohingya Muslims and communal violence which rocked the state in 2012. But this obscures long-standing resentment of decades-long of neglect by the Myanmar state which has made Rakhine State one of Myanmar’s least developed and poverty wracked areas.

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Migrants collect rainwater at a temporary refugee camp near Kanyin Chaung jetty, in Myanmar’s Rakhine State, June 4, 2015. Photo: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun
The AA explicitly uses the colonial era Arakan terminology, rejecting ‘Rakhine’ as a Myanmar term that implicitly sees the Rakhine as second class citizens, and that fuels broader Myanmar ridicule of the Rakhine as yokels who speak a tortured dialect of the Burmese language, akin to the dismissal of people from the Deep South in the United States.

The Kingdom of Arakan was sacked by the Myanmar kings in the 15th Century, and evidence of this rich cultural heritage is preserved in the ancient ruins of Mrauk-U.

Drawing on disaffected migrant workers from the Hpakant jade mines, the AA was hosted and trained by the Kachin Independence Army, one of Myanmar’s oldest and most sophisticated insurgent groups. Within two years, the AA was on the frontline alongside its Kachin allies, after the 17-year ceasefire between the Kachin and government collapsed in 2011, leading to heavy fighting which displaced over 100,000 civilians, hundreds of civilian casualties and destroyed villages, and combatant casualties numbering in the several thousand.

The AA operates in Northern Shan State as part of the Northern Alliance, which includes the Kokang-Chinese Myanmar Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), the Ta-ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), and Brigades 4 and 6 of the Kachin Independence Army. Underscoring the bewildering relationships of the Myanmar civil war, the Arakan Army also operated alongside ethnic-Myanmar soldiers of the All Burma Students Democratic Front (ABSDF) until that group signed the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) in October 2015.

The alliance has markedly stepped up operations against government targets, including the November 20, 2016 attack on the China-Myanmar border trade city of Muse, in which several civilians were killed and injured, bridges blown up, and the subsequent seizing of the border town of Mong Ko, before alliance fighters were driven from the town by the Tatmadaw’s use of heavy artillery and air-strikes.

The Northern Shan State fighting has been largely eclipsed by international attention on the repression of the Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine State, but it seizes domestic attention far more because of its marked intensification in recent years.

The Alliance assault on the former MNDAA stronghold of Laukkai in March, in which AA troops took part, included attacks on the main hotel and casino in which civilians and policemen alike were targeted, and allegedly scores of men and women were abducted as human shields during the insurgents retreat into the hills.
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Miners search for jade stones at a mine dump at a Hpakant jade mine in Kachin state, Myanmar November 25, 2015. Photo: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun

The AA’s participation in these northern operations for the past several years is predicated on the expansion of their trained and battle-tested fighters to open a front in their home state. As early as 2013, Rakhine political leaders were lobbying the previous government of U Thein Sein to open an area for AA fighters to relocate from Kachin State to Rakhine State, although with little support from the government.

In 2015, the AA opened a new area of operations in the borderlands of Buthidaung, Kyauktaw, and Mrauk-U townships of Rakhine State, and Paletwa township of Chin State close to the Bangladesh border. In several bouts of fighting between the AA and the Tatmadaw, the military admitted to losing several troops, including officers to Arakanese sniper fire.

The Tatmadaw reported 15 clashes between December 28, 2015 to January 4, 2016 in which large amounts of weapons and ammunition were captured. Fighting flared again in April and May, and in December 2016 in Paletwa, as Tatmadaw troops continued to sweep the area to interdict AA movements along the borderlands.

According to AA sources, the Tatmadaw have deployed ten battalions from their Western Command and Military Operations Command 15 based in Buthidaung to pacify their movements in three townships (Infantry battalions 374, 375, 376, 539 in Kyauktaw, 377, 378, 540 in Mrauk U, and 379, 380 and 540 in Min Bya).

The current size of the AA is difficult to measure. Some estimates place their total numbers at 1,500, which is fairly standard size for many smaller ethnic insurgent groups, while training in the north continues to attract large numbers of male and female recruits. (The KIA numbers around 7,000, while the United Wa State Army has over 25,000 under arms.)

The fighting has generated a cycle of dynamic civilian displacement necessitating international and national relief operations to supplement large humanitarian operations that exist for civilians displaced by communal violence in 2012 and responses to natural disasters.

The United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported 1,100 IDP’s in eight temporary sites in Kyauktaw, Rathedaung and Buthidaung, and worked with Rakhine relief agencies and the state government to assist civilians.
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Policemen stand guard as firemen work to extinguish fire during fighting between Buddhist Rakhine and Muslim Rohingya communities in Sittwe June 10, 2012. Photo: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun

Reports of extortion, ill-treatment and forced recruitment by the AA have increased, which are often countered by allegations of Tatmadaw brutality, including in one statement “witnesses and victims described how the armed forces forcedly (sic) displaced entire villages and destroyed, beatings with the barrel of a gun, executions, gun rape, looting and the burning of their homes.”

The fighting has exacerbated tensions between the AA and ethnic Chin civilians in Paletwa, and has sparked public criticism by Chin leaders and reports from the Chin Human Rights Organization that AA soldiers have been abducting Chin civilians, using others as forced labor, and planting landmines around civilian areas.

Chin political parties have condemned both sides of using of landmines without apportioning specific blame for reports of widespread human rights violations. Just days ago, Indian media reported that an estimated 300 Chin civilians, predominantly women and children, had fled Myanmar to seek sanctuary in Mizoram in northeast India, claiming that the AA had detained the men from Ralie village inside Chin State.

The AA dismissed these allegations in a statement posted to Facebook, and alleged that renegade Arakan Liberation Army soldiers were masquerading as AA forces to extort money from civilians and discredit the insurgent outfit. In such isolated settings, verifying various allegations of abuses is almost impossible.

The Myanmar military has responded to the the AA’s increased operations in Rakhine State with a wave of arrests of civilians suspected of providing material support to the insurgents. According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners-Burma, 58 Rakhine civilians have been sentenced under Section 17(1) of the Unlawful Association Act, with eight more facing trial while in detention in Sittwe Prison.

Bonds between Rakhine politicians, activists and the AA are tight: Maj-Gen Twan Mrat Naing’s father-in-law is the Rakhine State parliamentary Speaker of the House, U Saw Kyaw Hla.
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Tun Myat Naing, aka Twan Mrat Naing, commander-in-chief of the Arakan Army (AA), attends a meeting of ethnic armed group leaders at the United Wa State Army (UWSA) headquarters on May 6, 2015. Photo: Reuters/Stringer

In early April, the authorities stopped a fund-raising football match in Mrauk-U, dubbed the ‘Arakan Army Cup’ during the annual Thingyan water festival, and arrested a Buddhist abbot Nanda Thara and a lay supporter Khaing Ni Min charging them under Section 505 of the Penal Code related to causing public alarm or inciting people to violence.

These arrests have evinced widespread protests throughout Rakhine State and contribute to a sense of persistent Burman persecution of the Rakhine, the dismissal of their political aspirations, the continued plunder of their natural resources with only perfunctory development projects from the central state to assuage them.

Further antagonizing Rakhine political leaders, in May 2016 the national parliamentary speaker U Win Myint blocked a proposal by ANP MP Daw Khin Saw Wai for an urgent discussion on aid for civilians displaced by fighting between the AA and Myanmar army, because, the speaker said, the proposal was predicated more on raising the issue to push for inclusion of the AA in the nationwide ceasefire process.

The AA attended the Union Peacemaking Conference in Naypyidaw, having been invited as part of the Northern Alliance, facilitated by the Chinese special envoy to the peace talks. But the AA’s attendance comes after two years of official denunciations of their activities, with statements from both the military and State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi being all but identical, demanding the group disarm and then seek peace.
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Myanmar’s General Min Aung Hlaing takes part during a parade to mark the 72nd Armed Forces Day in the capital Naypyitaw, Myanmar March 27, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun
Defense Minister Lieutenant General Sein Win told the national parliament the AA had to cease its activities and sign the controversial nationwide ceasefire agreement. In a statement from Suu Kyi in March, she warned the non-signatories to the ceasefire that the only way to achieve peace was to sign, and to be ‘extremely careful’ in how they respond to that condition.

Exactly how does the AA pay for all this expanding activity? Given their popularity in Rakhine State, tax collection not just amongst supporters in their home state, but the many thousands of migrant workers in peri-urban factories of Yangon and the jade mines of Kachin State and Sagaing Region would be lucrative.

Involvement in the drug trade cannot be ruled out. In one of the most evocative front pages of the state-run newspaper Global New Light of Myanmar, in February 2016, the headline boldly proclaimed ‘How to Fund a War’, outlining a series of raids and arrests of AA officers in Yangon in which large numbers of arms and ammunition were seized, and reportedly 330,800 methamphetamine pills, or yaba.

The AA issued a ‘condemnation letter’ on the same day refuting the allegations as “childish and undignified” and blamed the Myanmar military for being the main player in the drug trade. Reporting on the drug trade in Rakhine State is perilous: last March the Sittwe home of the online editor of the Root Investigation Agency, Min Min, was bombed and the journalist forced to flee to Yangon.

International analysts reporting on restive Rakhine State guardedly claim that the AA has rarely publicly articulated anti-Rohingya or anti-Muslim sentiments, even though many AA officers will privately declare that Rohingya are all Bengali illegal immigrants and should leave: a position identical to the Myanmar army and many ultra-nationalist activists in the country.
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People and Buddhist monks protest against ethnic Rohingya Muslims many claim are illegal migrants in Yangon, Myanmar February 9, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Soe Zeya Tun
This changed recently, however. Following the coordinated attacks on Myanmar Border Guard Police outposts in Maungtaw by suspected Rohingya militants of the Harakah al-Yaqin (Faith Movement, later renamed as the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army), the ULA/AA issued a press release which called the militants “savage Bengali Muslim terrorists” and the violence a “rampage of the Bengali Islamic fundamentalist militants in Northern Arakan.”

The statement furthermore said “(T)he bordered area (sic) of the Northern Arakan and other cities such as Rangoon (Yangon) are now suffering adverse effects as a result of Arakan’s bordering with the population explosion of Bangladesh, the excessive entering of illegal Bengali immigrants into Arakan for decades and the neglect of the successive Burmese regimes to the Bengali’s intrusion and territorial expansion.”

There is little likelihood that the AA’s attendance at the largely symbolic Panglong 21st Century will make any real headway in addressing Rakhine grievances, and the expansion of their armed operations looks set to continue.

The intense nationalist messages expressed by Maj Gen Twan Mrat Naing and the AA troops under his command are widely held in Rakhine State, where resentment against the Myanmar state and military is widespread, and often misunderstood by the outside world which identifies Rakhine political grievances as being primarily driven by anti-Rohingya sentiment.

This lack of understanding of the AA’s armed revolt will only further postpone the resolution of the conflict and prolong the communal divisions that have generated conflict in Rakhine State for years. This is a dimension of the civil war in Myanmar that is only getting worse, not better, and is dangerously misunderstood.

David Scott Mathieson is a Yangon-based independent analyst
http://www.atimes.com/article/shadowy-rebels-extend-myanmars-wars/
 
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China looms larger than ever in Myanmar
Larry Jagan, June 20, 2017
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Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s top civilian leader – the State Counselor — remains torn between Asia and the West. And a spat with the UN is pushing Myanmar increasingly into China’s arms. In the past month, the Lady – as she is commonly known — has been trying to shore up support in the West, with visits to the United Kingdom, Canada and Sweden.

The hidden agenda was to bolster international support for her government’s position on Arakan. In particular, Myanmar’s shunning of the UN’s efforts to investigate the situation in Rakhine state – where the Muslim community, who call themselves Rohingyas, though the government maintains they are Bengalis, originally from their western neighbor Bangladesh — are severely persecuted.

It is still not clear whether as foreign minister she will attend the UN general assembly in New York later this year. But already she has underlined her determination not to allow a proposed UN human rights fact-finding mission. And she fears that there may be moves at the UN to charge Myanmar with crimes against humanity. So, she is left with no alternative but to turn to Asean, China and Russia for support.

While in Stockholm, Aung San Suu Kyi reiterated her objection to the UN human rights fact-finding mission. “It would have created greater hostility between the different communities [in Rakhine],” she told reporters after a meeting with Swedish Prime Minister. “We did not feel it was in keeping with the needs of the region in which we are trying to establish harmony and understanding, and to remove the fears that have kept the two communities apart for so long.”

In March this year, the UN human rights’ Council decided to send an independent international fact-finding mission, which was later appointed by the president of the council, to Myanmar to “establish the facts and circumstances of the alleged recent human rights violations by military and security forces, and abuses, in Myanmar, in particular in Rakhine State”, said the UN statement at the time. This was in response to credible reports that the Myanmar army ruthlessly cracked down on civilians, launched last October after nine policemen were killed in attacks last October that Myanmar blamed on Rohingya militants.

Earlier this year the UN special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar, Professor Yangkee Lee made this a key focus of her annual report. When addressing the UN Human Rights Council in March, she concluded that Myanmar’s security forces had committed mass killings and gang rapes in a campaign that “very likely” amounted to crimes against humanity and possibly ethnic cleansing.

Much of the evidence included in the report came from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights’ findings, which were based on extensive interviews with Rohingya survivors in Bangladesh in February. Some 75,000 Rohingya, according to activists and aid groups, fled from Rakhine State to Bangladesh to escape the military crackdown after October last year.

Last week Professor Yangkee Lee again alluded to the need for an international, independent investigation. She reiterated her belief that the “investigative mechanisms” established by the Government to assess the situation in Rakhine were seriously flawed. “Unfortunately, there have been no changes to address these concerns,” she said in Geneva last week. “In early March, the Maungdaw Investigation Commission conducted a three-day visit to Rakhine State, still without a robust methodology or witness protection policies in place.”

“I remain unconvinced that the military investigation team, which recently announced its findings dismissing practically all allegations against the security forces as wrong or false, is sufficiently independent or impartial,” she continued.

Nevertheless, Aung San Suu Kyi and her government remain steadfastly opposed to the UN fact-finding mission. She insists that only recommendations from a separate advisory commission on Rakhine, led by former UN chief Kofi Annan, would be heeded. “I think we should really give the commission a chance to show whether or not they have done their work properly instead of condemning them from the beginning,” she said on Stockholm recently.

The UN human rights council adopted the resolution setting up the fact-finding after the EU proposed it. Myanmar diplomats had campaigned strongly amongst European ambassadors warning them that support such a move might have repercussions for the activities in the country. Although Bangladesh welcomed the proposal, China and Russia distanced themselves from the resolution. What angered Myanmar’s top ministers, including the State Counselor, was the feeling that the EU was playing international politics with Myanmar. According to sources close to the government, they saw this a ploy to try to get the US to sign up to a human rights approach to foreign policy.

Here lies the crux of the problem for Aung San Suu Kyi. She feels betrayed by the EU and the US – her close friends before – according to government insiders. Washington in particular has failed Myanmar. The Lady remains suspicious of President Trump, having preferred to seen Hilary Clinton in the White House.

Since his victory, his lack of concern for human rights and his isolationist foreign policy are anathema to her. Also, unlike all his predecessors – Clinton, Bush and Obama – he has not reached over to the Myanmar leader. Instead has shunned the country – only preferring to deal with large trading partners in Asia – China and Japan. She is also insulted that the Thai military leader and prime minister Prayut Chan–o-cha has been asked to visit Washington and the White House ahead of her.

Analysts and commentators believe that this is more the result of inertia within the State department, as many of the top US diplomats dealing with Asia have resigned post-Trump and replacements are yet to appointed. In the hiatus, Myanmar – and much of Asia – worry about the vacuum in policy making in Washington in regard to foreign policy. And China has been quick to seize the opportunity this hiatus in White House affords them – and are making the most of the resulting power vacuum in Asia.

While Washington has no clear policy towards Asia, Beijing – with its ‘one belt, one road initiative’ – has clearly laid out its cards. A foreign policy that puts Asia at the center of Beijing’s relations, and making relations based on economics – trade, investment and aid – the priority rather than human rights. This appeals to Aung San Suu Kyi at present. And with Beijing actively supporting the peace process, she is increasingly beholden to he giant northern neighbor – whether enthusiastically or reluctantly.

This is not easy for her, as her inclination is to look towards the West – especially towards Britain. This was acutely highlighted earlier this year when she had dinner with the UK foreign minister Boris Johnson (also an Oxford graduate) in Myanmar: He quoted the first few lines of Lord Alfred Tennyson’s poem, Ulysses; to which she finished the verse. The pleasure she took in her address to the Guild Hall in London – when she was awarded the key to the city in May this year — a fascinating eulogy to Dick Whittington (and his famous cat) – who became Mayor of London in 1397 is also characteristic. These are but two stark examples of her connection to the UK, which underlines her personal commitment.

But she is also realist and pragmatist who want a non-aligned approach to foreign policy – tilting neither to the West or China. But the reality of the international situation and the priorities of Myanmar’s internal dynamics leave her no choice but to cozy up to China. The spat with the UN human rights council is only the final motivation.

http://southasianmonitor.com/2017/06/20/china-looms-larger-ever-myanmar/
 
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Desperate Rohingya seek new escape routes from Bangladesh

DHAKA: In squalid camps in Bangladesh, hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who have fled violence and persecution in neighbouring Myanmar dream of a better life abroad -- and rely on increasingly high-tech trafficking networks to get them there.

Dhaka denies new arrivals refugee status and, after a major crackdown sealed off the ocean routes traditionally used to traffic migrants to Southeast Asia, many Rohingya are turning to complex smuggling operations to escape Bangladesh.

"People are desperate to leave the camps," said community leader Mohammad Idris.

"Those who have money or gold ornaments are paying smugglers to get them out by air, and those who don't are trying roads."

The Rohingya, who live mainly in Myanmar, are one of the most persecuted minorities in the world.

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Many now live in grinding poverty in Bangladesh's southeast coastal district of Cox's Bazar, packed into camps that were home to more than 300,000 Rohingya even before some 70,000 new arrivals poured across the border after the Myanmar army launched a bloody crackdown last October.

Bangladesh denies them the right to work, and is proposing to rehouse them on a mosquito-infested island that regularly floods at high tide.


NEW ROUTES

For years, rickety boats were the main mode of escape for the refugees who would pay hefty amounts to smugglers to get them to Malaysia and Thailand.

Those routes were cut off in 2015 when mass graves of would-be migrants, many of them killed at sea, were discovered in Thailand, triggering a global outcry and a major crackdown on traffickers.

But the smuggling networks swiftly identified new routes out of Bangladesh by air and road, using mobile payments to operate internationally.

Mohammad, an undocumented 20-year-old Rohingya, said he spent 600,000 taka ($7,700) to reach Saudi Arabia, where he now lives.

"I paid a local friend for a Bangladeshi passport and other papers. He also helped me pass through the immigration," Mohammad told AFP using the WhatsApp messaging service. He asked that his family name not be used.

As it becomes more difficult for migrants to leave Bangladesh, many have been forced to head to destinations once considered less appealing.

Those who cannot afford flights are using buses and even travelling on foot to escape Bangladesh, going to India before moving on to Nepal or Pakistan. Some have even settled in the troubled Kashmir region.

There is no reliable data on the value of the trafficking trade, but estimates suggest it is worth millions of dollars in Bangladesh alone.

These networks arrange fake Bangladeshi passports and birth certificates for the Rohingya, a stateless ethnic minority denied citizenship rights in Myanmar even though they have lived in the Buddhist-majority nation for generations.

"It's unbelievable how deep the traffickers' grassroots network is and how smoothly they operate across nations," said Shakirul Islam, head of a migrants' welfare organisation called Ovibashi Karmi Unnayan Program.

Migration expert Jalaluddin Sikder said a proliferation of mobile phone money transfer services in Bangladesh was making it easier for the traffickers to do business internationally.

"Multinational trafficking rackets are now a phone call away," said Sikder, who works in Dhaka's Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit, Bangladesh's main private think tank on cross-border migration.

PAY YOUR WAY

Research conducted last year by a local charity uncovered complex underground trafficking networks that span the globe, using sophisticated technology to distribute payments globally without detection.

"They are efficient in distributing the money to all the key players," said Selim Ahmed Parvez, researcher for the Manusher Jonno Foundation (MJF).

These, he said, range from "local trafficking agents, to law-enforcing officers, administrative officials, politicians and the kingpins".

The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), an elite force fighting militancy and organised crime in Bangladesh, told AFP they were working to stop Rohingya being smuggled out of the country.

"It (trafficking) is happening here and we're trying hard to identify the routes and the channels the smugglers use," said Nurul Amin, RAB commander for Cox's Bazar.

But tracking down the smugglers is only half the battle.

Fears are rising in the camps over a proposal to move the estimated 400,000 Rohingya to a desolate island in the Bay of Bengal -- a fate many say they would do anything to avoid.

"We've successfully tackled the boat migration. And now our focus is on other smuggling routes," said the RAB's Amin.

"But if someone is so desperate to migrate, can you stop him?"


http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news...eek-new-escape-routes-from-bangladesh-8964144
 
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