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Rohingya!

Next time, we will see @Nilgiri volunteering to work for China and Russia at the UN Security Council. Wish him the best of luck. Even his butcher PM Modi has been forced to change his stand. @Nilgiri, what are your next actions?

No further actions needed lol. Just read what's posted here already and watch 100,000's more rohingya arrive into BD permanently....on the back of not even a UN resolution but simply a press statement with the most vague language ever....and 0 pressure on MM.
 
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03:19 AM, September 14, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:22 AM, September 14, 2017
The situation 'catastrophic'
UN chief asks Myanmar to halt military action
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Reuters, United Nations

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres yesterday called on authorities in Myanmar to end violence against Rohingyas and acknowledged the situation there is best described as ethnic cleansing.

The humanitarian situation in Myanmar was "catastrophic," Guterres said, and called on all countries to do what they could to supply aid.

"I call on the Myanmar authorities to suspend military action, end the violence, uphold the rule of law and recognise the right of return of all those who had to leave the country," Guterres said at a news conference.

Pressure has been mounting on Myanmar to end violence that has sent about 370,000 Rohingya Muslims fleeing to Bangladesh, with the United States calling for protection of civilians and Bangladesh urging safe zones to enable refugees to go home.
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Asked if the situation could be described as ethnic cleansing, Guterres replied: "Well I would answer your question with another question: When one-third of the Rohingya population had to flee the country, could you find a better word to describe it?"

The secretary-general also said he has spoken to Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar's national leader, several times.

"This is a dramatic tragedy. People are dying and suffering at horrible numbers and we need to stop it. That is my main concern," he said.

The UN's top human rights official earlier this week denounced Myanmar for conducting a "cruel military operation" against the Rohingya, branding it "a textbook example of ethnic cleansing."
http://www.thedailystar.net/frontpage/the-situation-catastrophic-1462021
 
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A textbook case of ethnic cleansing says the UN's top human rights official. Nearly 400,000 Rohingyas have fled Burma in the past fortnight for neighboring Bangladesh after skirmishes between local militants and authorities triggered a fierce backlash. The plight of the Rohingyas has stirred indignation across the Muslim world in places like Indonesia and Turkey's First Lady dispatched to Bangladesh to support relief efforts. So what should the wider international community do?

Phil Robertson - Human Rights Watch
Jean Michel Lacombe - Former French Ambassador to Burma
Nay San Lwin - Rohingya activist and blogger
 
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Our relationship should be mutual beneficial and not of master and slave.
Actually it is almost like that. You can thank our elected officials for that though.

If Trump gets his way and goes all out for Pakistan [which is possible] who do you think is going to help Pakistan? Your Rohingya Mukhtos? Your Bangla friends? Some other Ummah like Saudia? No. Your going to look to our little athiest friends up in China.

Ps. The Saudis just signed a $100 billion thank you deal with Trump - lest you forgot.
Ummah is a really romantic concept in this day and age. Maybe in the past there might have been some kind of unified Muslim identity (though even those stories are selectively told and highly romanticized) but that does not exist in this day and age.

Also I cannot seem to understand why Pakistanis defend Bangalis when these people were butchering and raping West Pakistanis in 1971 and today their ultra-Nationalist government spouts anti-Pakistani rhetoric. Bangladesh should bear the brunt of helping its own ethnic kinsmen in Myanmar. We can help as Muslims but not more than we can afford.

If China really wants to emerge as a real super power than it has to side with humanity, else other super powers were / are lot better than China in many ways. The only winning difference would be siding with weak and confronting the bully. Which in this Burma's case is very clear.

And for my country Pakistan .......... I hope they (Pakistanis) know Pakistan values more than Myanmar when it comes to international interests.
You people don't know how foreign policy works.
 
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Tafrida, World Food Program worker now a Rohingya refugee
12 Sep 2017, 09:29 | updated: 12 Sep 2017, 11:35
Sheikh Khalilur Rahman
Ukhiya is now an overcrowded upazila in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar.Palongkhali is the union council of the upazila . There are now crowds everywhere, in the area of forests, hills and sea shores. After Kutupalong, another Rohingya camp was constructed at Balukhali of Palongkhali.

Like any other Bangladesh-Myanmar border points, Rohingya families are fleeing violence in their own country Myanmar and entering neibouring Bangladesh through the Anjuman Para, a hamlet of Palongkhali. There is a Bangladesh Border Guard (BGB) camp in the border point. Green paddy fields are on one side of the village and the River Naf on another side. And after the Naf, the hill is in sight. Local residents and Rohingya people have named the hill as ‘Kalapahar’. The hill is now another name of horror among the Rohingya people. During the Eid-ul-Azha and after the Eid, local people of the village witnessed the smoke rising behind the hill. That identified the doubt that the village was burning.

There are no trees in the vast paddy fields. In a fine morning on 11 September, it was seen that a long rows of Rohingya people, including children, women and old people were entering Anjuman Para through the aisle of fields. However, the numbers of young Rohingya people were very few. About 20 to 25 families were seen sitting near the green field. They looked exhausted and shattered after finishing their long toiling in search of safe place. They were carrying bags, sacks and different types of emergency valuables.

Tafrida, in his early twenties, one of the newly arrived Rohingyas, was sitting near the field along with her family members. She was feeding a ripe banana to her niece.

When the journalist went to her and asked questions, she exhaustedly started to respond the queries in English. The journalist has talked to many newly arrived refugees but none of them speak in English.

‘You can speak in English?’ the journalist asked Tafrida with surprise.

Taking a deep breath she said, ‘I have an educated family. We’re here from Buchidang in Rakhine State. I can speak English. Before coming here, I worked as community teacher under a project run by World Food Programme (WFP) in Myanmar’s Rakhine State.’

The WFP is the food-assistance branch of the United Nations and the world’s largest humanitarian organization addressing hunger and promoting food security.

‘After passing the higher secondary level examinations with a science background in 2012, I joined the WFP. I wish I could be a university graduate. But we have no rights for education and government work.’

Tafrida depicted her agony saying, ‘We’re three siblings. I’m here with my mother, Tahera Begum, my elder brother, Mohammad Aref, his wife and daughter, and my younger sister Fatema. We had a respected and lovely family there. I tought little children with great enthusiasm and joy. I have led a very simple and quite life, dreaming the government would give us citizenship one day and I would be able to take admission in university. But the Myanmar military soldiers and local Buddhists destroyed my dream, our happy family and our peaceful lives. When the military and local Buddhists commenced shooting at our village, we luckily escaped death and fled from our village on August 29. Some of our relatives saw right in front of their eyes that many people had been killed by the army. We took shelter on forests and were scared from the dangers in the jungle. From the jungle, we walked for five days until we reached the border. We crossed the border on a small boat, it felt very dangerous. After waiting some days at the border points, swimming and long walk, we crossed the border and now we are here in your country Bangladesh. I can’t even think that I was a teacher, fled from my motherland to save my dignity and life and now a helpless refugee, who don’t know where to go, where to sleep and where to live. I have no idea what our future will be now.’

The violence and exodus began on August 25 when Rohingya insurgents attacked Myanmar police and paramilitary posts in what they said was an effort to protect their ethnic minority from persecution by security forces in the majority Buddhist country.
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In response, the military unleashed what it called ‘clearance operations’ to root out the insurgents. Accounts from the refugees show the Myanmar military is also targeting civilians with shootings and wholesale burning of Rohingya villages in an apparent attempt to purge Rakhine state of Muslims.

Bloody anti-Muslim rioting that erupted in 2012 in Rakhine state forced more than 100,000 Rohingya into displacement camps in Bangladesh, where many still live today. Rohingya have faced decades of discrimination and hounding in Myanmar and are denied citizenship despite centuries-olds roots in the Rakhine region. Myanmar denies Rohingya exist as an ethnic group and says those living in Rakhine are illegal migrants from Bangladesh.

However, she did not forget killing and arson attacks operated by the Myanmar military along local Buddhists.

‘Many of our unmarried girls were picked up, beaten, raped, tortured and killed by the Myanmar government’s soldiers and Mogs (Buddhists). Thanks to Allah as I escaped the horrible situations what nobody can believe without observing their own eyes. It's completely out of imagination to understand the real cause of rough behavior with the innocent people,’ Tafrida, who is also an unmarried girl, added.

Bursting into tears, the former WFP worker said, ‘Though we are in great trouble, I feel safe here. Thanks to your country (Bangladesh) for giving us (Rohingyas) shelter and saving our lives.’

Asked whether she and her family members want to go back to Myanmar, she said, ‘Despite having my motherland, we don’t want to back in the dead land. They will kill us. We want to survive.’

More than 300,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh from Buddhist-majority Myanmar since the latest violence began on August 25, joining more than 400,000 others already living there in cramped makeshift camps. The United Nations’ top human rights official on Monday slammed Myanmar for conducting a ‘cruel military operation’ against the Rohingya, branding it ‘a textbook example of ethnic cleansing’.

More than 1,000 people have been killed in Myanmar, most minority Rohingya Muslims, more than twice the government’s total. In the last two weeks alone 270,000 mostly Rohingya civilians have fled to Bangladesh, overwhelming refugee camps at Ukhia and Teknaf in Cox’s Bazar that were already bursting at the seams. The Rohingya have long been subjected to discrimination in mostly Buddhist Myanmar, which denies them citizenship. The Rohingyas are a stateless Muslim minority who has faced extreme poverty for decades.

The Burmese military entered northern Rakhine state—and over the next four months detained and killed men, women and children. The army men burned down houses and raped women and young girls. The UN report says these actions amount to possible crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing.
http://en.ntvbd.com/bangladesh/147193/Tafrida-World-Food-Program-worker-now-a-Rohingya-refugee

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Drone footage of Rohingya refugee Camps:BBC
আকাশ থেকে ধারণ করা ছবিতে বাংলাদেশের রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থী শিবির

১৩ সেপ্টেম্বর ২০১৭
গত কয়েক সপ্তাহে মিয়ানমার সীমান্ত অতিক্রম করে বাংলাদেশে আশ্রয় নিয়েছে প্রায় চার লাখ রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থী।

রাখাইন প্রদেশে সেনাবাহিনীর অভিযান ও সহিংসতা থেকে প্রাণভয়ে পালিয়ে এসেছে এসব রোহিঙ্গা মুসলিমরা। অনেক নারী ও শিশু বাংলাদেশের কক্সবাজার এলাকার বিভিন্ন স্থানে ছড়িয়ে ছিটিয়ে রয়েছে।

তাদের আশ্রয় দিতে বাংলাদেশে বেশ কিছু আশ্রয় শিবির খোলা হয়েছে, কক্সবাজারের উখিয়া বিশাল এলাকাজুড়ে রোহিঙ্গাদের আশ্রয়কেন্দ্র নির্মাণের কাজ করছে কর্তৃপক্ষ। কর্তৃপক্ষের ভাষ্য অনুযায়ী রোহিঙ্গারা যেনো ছড়িয়ে ছিটিয়ে না থেকে সুনির্দিষ্ট জায়গায় থাকতে পারে সেজন্য এ উদ্যোগ নেয়া হয়েছে।

কক্সবাজারের রোহিঙ্গাদের জন্য যে কয়টি আশ্রয়কেন্দ্র রয়েছে রইখং এলাকা তারএকটি।

ড্রোন ফুটেজের মাধ্যমে ওই শরণার্থী শিবিরের চিত্র তুলে ধরা হচ্ছে।


মিয়ানমারকে কতটা চাপ দিতে পারবে জাতিসংঘ?
শরণার্থী রোহিঙ্গা পরিবারের পুরুষ সদস্যরা কোথায়?
বাংলাদেশ-মিয়ানমার সম্পর্কে ঘনিষ্ঠতা বাড়েনি কেন?
http://www.bbc.com/bengali/news-41250109?ocid=socialflow_facebook
 
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I'm not going to teach you common sense. It's something you should have grown up with. If you don't have it then what can I say.

But I will leave you with this much: if "human rights" dictated foreign policies then Israel, India, and America would be diplomatically isolated, no one would trade with them or have any relations with these countries.

But clearly reality shows that no one gives two hoots about "human rights". It's all about national interests first.

National Interests Trump Human Rights


For principled upright people.... human blood matters more. Nations are made of humans and not interests.

Suppose Pakistan starts killing xyz minority people .......... let me guess old farts here who openly support killing Muslims would be the ones raising human rights voices ............. hypocrites? Well I think AT did destroy some stupid statues and the whole world went apeshit ........ now killing humans is perfectly okay and for some old farts Pakistan shouldn't raise a voice because these cowards think it would be against the national interest ......... as if national interests are unilateral dependence only.

No please spare me your lectures on common sense, you don't make any sense to me.
 
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A tale of two leaders
Tribune Editorial
Published at 07:59 PM September 13, 2017
Last updated at 08:25 PM September 13, 2017
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PM Hasina has reminded the world that no matter how strained for resources a country may be, humanity always comes first
For quite some time now, Nobel peace prize-winner Aung San Suu Kyi’s silence on the ethnic cleansing of Myanmar’s Rohingya population has been deafening.

With Myanmar’s political leadership failing shamefully in its humanitarian responsibilities, it is a matter of great pride for Bangladesh and hope for the world that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has not turned her back on the Rohingya people.

By providing aid and shelter to the fleeing Rohingya, registering them in camps, and welcoming them with open arms, the PM has reminded the world that no matter how strained for resources a country may be, humanity always comes first.

And right now, with Suu Kyi ungracefully bowing out of the upcoming United Nations General Assembly, while Sheikh Hasina pledges to ease the suffering of 700,000 refugees, the contrast between these two leaders could not possibly be starker.

With Suu Kyi turning her back on the UNGA and showing her true colours, Bangladesh is presented with an opportunity to present the case that the world community absolutely must intervene.

Bangladesh continues to do all that it can, but our resources only go so far. The larger powers of the world must understand the sheer magnitude of the humanitarian crisis unfolding at the Bangladesh-Myanmar border, and take unequivocal first, ensure that the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh are fully provided for, but, second, that they are able to return to their homeland of Rakhine State and live in safety and security there.

The Myanmar government has made it clear that, left to their own devices, they will continue with their ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya from Rakhine, and are deaf to the concerns of international law as well as common decency and humanity.

At the upcoming UNGA, Bangladesh has a chance to show the international community what is really at stake, and make the case that it is time to put some serious pressure on Myanmar — the kind that Yangon cannot ignore.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/opinion/2017/09/13/tale-two-leaders/
 
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