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What created the blueprint for Rohingya genocide in Myanmar? Western colonialism

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http://www.independent.co.uk/voices...-suu-kyi-colonialism-bangladesh-a7932876.html


What created the blueprint for Rohingya genocide in Myanmar? Western colonialism
Authorities in Yangon stand accused of war crimes yet the international community refuses to act


Horrified Rohingya women and children flee the burning villages as Myanmar's army intensifies it's campaign of persecution against the minority.

Yangon presents its offensive as reasonable action against militant groups operating in the Rakhine state. However, satellite images show villages burned to the ground suggesting that the damage and scale of human rights abuses is more severe than has been told.

But while international pressure mounts upon Nobel peace prize winner Aung Sun Suu Kyi to stop what some are calling war crimes, Myanmar's army chief has continually defended his forces' actions against the Rohingya people.

Speaking at a press conference in the country's capital, he blamed the crisis on the need to complete "unfinished business" left over from World War Two.


Without absolving the present Myanmar government of responsibility for what is happening in the country, looking at the nation's history it’s important to see how colonialism laid the groundwork for what appear to be ongoing massacres.


In 1948 British Rule ended in Burma; the military regime thus began to create a new sense of nationhood, during which the scapegoating of the Rohingya started manifesting within the Myanmar public. Visibly different from the Burmese due to their different look and religion, the popular myth is that Rohingya communities came from Bangladesh. In fact though, they have deep historical and ancestral roots belonging to the postcolonial borders of Myanmar.


Similarities with Bangladeshi communities is natural due to Arakan neighbouring the Bangladeshi province of Chittagong: indeed, the separation of these provinces and the implementation of borders were a product of colonial rule. The British had actually promised independence to the Rohingya during the war with Japan, though the promise was subsequently revoked. Predicting the escalating tensions between the Rohingya and other Burmese ethnic communities, some Rohingyas even petitioned for them to be included into East Pakistan (now known as Bangladesh) during the 1947 partition.


Video shows Rohingya flee burning villages in Myanmar

However this article isn’t here to go into the details of post-colonial identities – no factors should on any grounds de-legitimise the Rohingyas right to citizenship today or their entitlement to basic humans rights within Myanmar.

The historical progression of the present persecution can be traced back to 1962 when a military coup swept to power. In order to establish a mandate for them to rule, they began to use religion as an indication of whether one was a proper citizen of the state, exploiting Buddhism to justify their nationalism. In 1974, the Rohingyas had their identity stripped and were classified as “foreigners” by the state. This led to large numbers of Rohingyas fleeing to neighbouring countries, escaping violence which this legislation appeared to justify.

In 1982 the Citizenship law was enacted, not only excluding the Rohingya from attaining citizenship but also denying them the right to live in Myanmar unless they had solid evidence to show their ancestors lived there prior to independence - even though such citizenship documents for most communities are impossible to obtain.

Aung San Suu Kyi pushes back against criticism of handling of Rohingya abuses
Known as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants, Myanmar authorities refuse to use the term Rohingya, legitimising the systematic erasure of the Rohingya as an identity.

In 2013, Win Myaing, the official spokesperson of the Rakhine State Government said “How can it be ethnic cleansing? They are not an ethnic group.” By referring to them as Bangladeshi Muslims the state not only presents them as a symbol of Muslim invasion (which is seen as a global problem) but also as the “Bengali Muslim”, which has been constructed as an ethnically inferior identity and used throughout the Indian subcontinent to justify and legitimise genocide, whether within the Bangladeshi Liberation War or the Nellie massacre in Assam, India.


Violence has been escalating dangerously after the 2012 Rakhine State riots, with thousands killed and more than 125,000 Rohingya Muslims displaced. Since then more than 140,000 Rohingyas have been forced to flee Myanmar altogether, becoming refugees in neighbouring countries, facing different levels of prejudices within Bangladesh, India, Thailand and Malaysia. Earlier this year more than 1,000 Rohingya were killed in a new crackdown by the Myanmar state, say UN officials. The Rohingya also describe military tactics of systematic rape being used against them.

Myanmar’s government and military now stand accused of war crimes. The international community meanwhile refuses to act; and the British government has blood on its hands after selling more than half a million pounds worth of weapons to Myanmar over the past three years. Boris Johnson’s cowardly response as the Foreign Secretary only further idolised a woman who passes off allegations of genocide as "fake news". The Rohingya need urgent action; most are living in refugee camps, denied citizenship, basic health care and employment.

Put bluntly, the destruction of an ethnic group is genocide and the continual indifference by the international community only enables and legitimises Myanmar's violence.
 
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The complete silence of entire world proves that the International Community, so called world powers are not against Terrorism but against Muslims.
 
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In 1982 the Citizenship law was enacted, not only excluding the Rohingya from attaining citizenship but also denying them the right to live in Myanmar unless they had solid evidence to show their ancestors lived there prior to independence - even though such citizenship documents for most communities are impossible to obtain.
To make it impossible to Rohingya to get citizenship, Burmese junta made it mandatory to show documents that any individual Rohingya's ancestor were living in Arakan from before 1824, the year of Ango-Burmese war.Now tell me how many of you can show documents that prove that your ancestors were living in a particular place for more than 200 years? This is the type of misfortune Rohingyas are dealing with.
 
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The complete silence of entire world proves that the International Community, so called world powers are not against Terrorism but against Muslims.
Brother its Bangladesh which keeps the entire world silent. Even till few months ago we did not allow any foreign media to enter border area or refugee camp with the request of Myanmar.
Rohingyas have more enemies in Bangladesh than in Myanmar.

To make it impossible to Rohingya to get citizenship, Burmese junta made it mandatory to show documents that any individual Rohingya's ancestor were living in Arakan from before 1824, the year of Ango-Burmese war.Now tell me how many of you can show documents that prove that your ancestors were living in a particular place for more than 200 years? This is the type of misfortune Rohingyas are dealing with.
I dont even have a familly tree more than 4 generation. :(
 
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Majority of them are from BD which illegally entered into Myanmar. they cant show any proof and its right if now they are heading back to there real home.
In Assam also many illegal Bd people entered and living with Adhara, Election card even Free ration Card all obtained illegally and you people refuse to accept them as there people.
Recently an inquiry happen in Assam and it found out many even 90 years old couples giving birth and having 200-400 childern registered in Adhara. These Fake BD population if we start sending back then again BD will whine and called it ethnic cleansing
 
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Majority of them are from BD which illegally entered into Myanmar. they cant show any proof and its right if now they are heading back to there real home.
In Assam also many illegal Bd people entered and living with Adhara, Election card even Free ration Card all obtained illegally and you people refuse to accept them as there people.
Recently an inquiry happen in Assam and it found out many even 90 years old couples giving birth and having 200-400 childern registered in Adhara. These Fake BD population if we start sending back then again BD will whine and called it ethnic cleansing
You have released your verbal diarrhoea here very well and now go back to your open toilet slum and full your stomach with rats and cow cola my dalit friend.
Screen-Shot-2017-03-28-at-1.40.02-PM-min.png
 
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Doyalbaba,

show documents that any individual Rohingya's ancestor were living in Arakan from before 1824, the year of Ango-Burmese war.Now tell me how many of you can show documents that prove that your ancestors were living in a particular place for more than 200 years?

You can ask your Pakistani brethren and cistern. They can prove their ancestry back to the Holy Prophet (pbuh) and his companions (RA).

Regards
 
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Majority of them are from BD which illegally entered into Myanmar. they cant show any proof and its right if now they are heading back to there real home.
In Assam also many illegal Bd people entered and living with Adhara, Election card even Free ration Card all obtained illegally and you people refuse to accept them as there people.
Recently an inquiry happen in Assam and it found out many even 90 years old couples giving birth and having 200-400 childern registered in Adhara. These Fake BD population if we start sending back then again BD will whine and called it ethnic cleansing
Proof of your claim?
 
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Pakistani Muslims help oppressed and need Muslims all over the world , we will continue helping.

However till the time Ummah becomes one kaffirs will keep killing them India and Burma are prime examples.
 
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What created the blueprint for Rohingya genocide in Myanmar? Western colonialism
Authorities in Yangon stand accused of war crimes yet the international community refuses to act
Tasnima Uddin
rohingya.jpg

Rohingya refugees are fleeing to Bangladesh amid sustained persecution Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters

Horrified Rohingya women and children flee the burning villages as Myanmar's army intensifies it's campaign of persecution against the minority.

Yangon presents its offensive as reasonable action against militant groups operating in the Rakhine state. However, satellite images show villages burned to the ground suggesting that the damage and scale of human rights abuses is more severe than has been told.

But while international pressure mounts upon Nobel peace prize winner Aung Sun Suu Kyi to stop what some are calling war crimes, Myanmar's army chief has continually defended his forces' actions against the Rohingya people.

Speaking at a press conference in the country's capital, he blamed the crisis on the need to complete "unfinished business" left over from World War Two.

Without absolving the present Myanmar government of responsibility for what is happening in the country, looking at the nation's history it’s important to see how colonialism laid the groundwork for what appear to be ongoing massacres.

In 1948 British Rule ended in Burma; the military regime thus began to create a new sense of nationhood, during which the scapegoating of the Rohingya started manifesting within the Myanmar public. Visibly different from the Burmese due to their darker skin colour and religion, the popular myth is that Rohingya communities came from Bangladesh. In fact though, they have deep historical and ancestral roots belonging to the postcolonial borders of Myanmar.

Similarities with Bangladeshi communities is natural due to Arakan neighbouring the Bangladeshi province of Chittagong: indeed, the separation of these provinces and the implementation of borders were a product of colonial rule. The British had actually promised independence to the Rohingya during the war with Japan, though the promise was subsequently revoked. Predicting the escalating tensions between the Rohingya and other Burmese ethnic communities, some Rohingyas even petitioned for them to be included into East Pakistan (now known as Bangladesh) during the 1947 partition.

However this article isn’t here to go into the details of post-colonial identities – no factors should on any grounds de-legitimise the Rohingyas right to citizenship today or their entitlement to basic humans rights within Myanmar.

The historical progression of the present persecution can be traced back to 1962 when a military coup swept to power. In order to establish a mandate for them to rule, they began to use religion as an indication of whether one was a proper citizen of the state, exploiting Buddhism to justify their nationalism. In 1974, the Rohingyas had their identity stripped and were classified as “foreigners” by the state. This led to large numbers of Rohingyas fleeing to neighbouring countries, escaping violence which this legislation appeared to justify.

In 1982 the Citizenship law was enacted, not only excluding the Rohingya from attaining citizenship but also denying them the right to live in Myanmar unless they had solid evidence to show their ancestors lived there prior to independence - even though such citizenship documents for most communities are impossible to obtain.

Aung San Suu Kyi pushes back against criticism of handling of Rohingya abuses
Known as illegal Bangladeshi immigrants, Myanmar authorities refuse to use the term Rohingya, legitimising the systematic erasure of the Rohingya as an identity.

In 2013, Win Myaing, the official spokesperson of the Rakhine State Government said “How can it be ethnic cleansing? They are not an ethnic group.” By referring to them as Bangladeshi Muslims the state not only presents them as a symbol of Muslim invasion (which is seen as a global problem) but also as the “Bengali Muslim”, which has been constructed as an ethnically inferior identity and used throughout the Indian subcontinent to justify and legitimise genocide, whether within the Bangladeshi Liberation War or the Nellie massacre in Assam, India.

Violence has been escalating dangerously after the 2012 Rakhine State riots, with thousands killed and more than 125,000 Rohingya Muslims displaced. Since then more than 140,000 Rohingyas have been forced to flee Myanmar altogether, becoming refugees in neighbouring countries, facing different levels of prejudices within Bangladesh, India, Thailand and Malaysia. Earlier this year more than 1,000 Rohingya were killed in a new crackdown by the Myanmar state, say UN officials. The Rohingya also describe military tactics of systematic rape being used against them.

Myanmar’s government and military now stand accused of war crimes. The international community meanwhile refuses to act; and the British government has blood on its hands after selling more than half a million pounds worth of weapons to Myanmar over the past three years. Boris Johnson’s cowardly response as the Foreign Secretary only further idolised a woman who passes off allegations of genocide as "fake news". The Rohingya need urgent action; most are living in refugee camps, denied citizenship, basic health care and employment.

Put bluntly, the destruction of an ethnic group is genocide and the continual indifference by the international community only enables and legitimises Myanmar's violence.
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices...-suu-kyi-colonialism-bangladesh-a7932876.html
 
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Burmese-guerrilla-force-800x445.jpg

History
Britain Betrayed Rohingya After They Helped Them Defeat Japan in World War II
September 8, 2017 admin 0 Comments
The Campaign in North and Central Burma February 1944 – August 1945: A well armed patrol of American led Burmese guerillas crossing a river in central Burma.

How? They survived, thanks to the local Rohingya Muslims who fed them for one.

In the book ‘Another Man’s War’ by Barnaby Phillips who was a war correspondant for the BBC, speaks of ‘The Forgotten Army’ and tells the story of how some soldiers who were badly injured were helped by the Rohingya who nursed them back to health.

One man especially, Shuyiman, cared for the men, eventually hiding them in his basha hut where they lived with his family in the village of Mairong. Two black Africans saved by a family of Burmese Muslims, hardly able to communicate, from opposite ends of the world, caught up in a war that wasn’t theirs; as Phillips calls it, ‘an unlikely but beautiful thing’. After nine months they were reunited with a British unit and sent home.

Isaac, one of the soldiers recalls that in the heat of their frontline rescue he and David had not been able to thank Shuyiman or say goodbye. This had weighed heavily on him. And so Phillips gets Isaac to write a letter, and sets off for Burma.

Miraculously, Phillips meets the grandchildren of the long dead Shuyiman and is able to hand over Isaac’s letter. The family tell Phillips: ‘Our parents said those men were in trouble; they needed help, otherwise they were going to die.’

The Broken Promise
The Rohingya were promised a separate Muslim state when the British reclaimed Burma from Japanese occupation during World War II as a reward for their loyalty. But instead, only those Rohingya that had collaborated with the British were appointed to official posts within the British-controlled colony.

By 1947, the group had formed an army and had approached President Jinnah of newly-formed Pakistan to incorporate northern Arakan into a part of the country that would later form Bangladesh. Experts believe that it was this action that led to eventual problems between the Rohingya and the Burmese government, who saw the group as untrustworthy.

When Burma declared independence in 1948, most Rohingya officials were replaced with Buddhist Arakanis who began to institute policies that many of the Muslim group considered unfair. Since that time, ethnic tensions have divided the two peoples
141559727.jpg

A British patrol advancing along the Waw river, Burma Photo: Getty
Prior to 1962 the Rohingya community was recognized as an indigenous ethnic nationality of Burma, with members of the group serving as representatives in the Burmese parliament, as well as ministers, parliamentary secretaries, and other high-ranking government positions. But since Burma’s military junta took control of the country in 1962, the Rohingya have been systematically deprived of their political rights.

The Rohingya were declared “non-nationals” and “foreign residents,” according to a citizenship law established by the regime in 1982, and were denied the right to participate in multiparty elections held in 1990.

The Rohingya have been subjected to large-scale ethnic cleansing following the formation of an independent Burma. Since 1948, nearly 1.5 million Rohingya have been forced to leave their homeland to avoid this persecution. Many members of the group have fled to Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, but others communities can be found in the U.A.E., Thailand, and Malaysia.

Approximately 800,000 Rohingya still live inside Burma, while an estimated 600,000 live in Bangladesh, 250,000 live in Pakistan, and 300,000 live in Saudi Arabia. Around 100,000 other Rohingya make up parts of the population of the U.A.E., Thailand, and Malaysia.

Communal violence between Rohingya and ethnic Buddhists in Burma’s Arakan state, also called Rakhine, in 2012 left more than 200 dead and tens of thousands homeless, with the Rohingya bearing the brunt of the violence. Deadly clashes erupted again two years later, prompting calls by rights groups and the United Nations for investigations into the unrest.

Helped by human traffickers, hundreds of Rohingya meanwhile began to flee Burma by boat for Malaysia, Thailand, and Indonesia, leading to a surge of illegal migration by Rohingya and Bangladeshis in May 2015 that saw countries in the region turning vessels filled with hundreds if not thousands of sick and hungry passengers back at sea.

Today the Rohingya still struggle in what many are calling an ethnic cleansing and genocide. But Turkey has been at the forefront in helping the Rohingya with aid and meeting with Myanmar and Bangladeshi officials to discuss the future of these persecuted people.
Sources: rfa.org, spectator.co.uk.
http://muslim-stories.top/britain-b...hey-helped-them-defeat-japan-in-world-war-ii/
 
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