Is the Theme of ‘World Refugee Day’ becoming a farce?
June 20 marked the World Refugee Day. It was supposed to
raise awareness of the plight of the estimated 42 million displaced people
worldwide. A United Nations report released that week showed that 800,000
people were forced to flee across borders last year -- more than any time since
2000. In a message to mark the day, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said, “We must not turn
away from those in need. Refugees leave because they have no choice. We must
choose to help.”
The emerging refugee crisis inside Burma (Myanmar ) makes a mockery of Ban
Ki-moon’s statement. His office has failed not only to stop refugee crises in
our world from emerging but also in ensuring that the refugees are not turned
away.
According to several human rights groups thousands of
unarmed Muslims may already have been killed in the apartheid state of Myanmar . Many
Rohingya young men, picked up by the government forces, have simply disappeared,
and are now feared death. Many victims – old and young, afraid of being
ambushed and tortured to death by the Rakhine extremists and their
partners-in-crime -- the government forces, have ventured out to seek asylum as
refugees in Bangladesh ,
where they have been denied entry.
Despite the theme for this year’s World Refugee Day being:
'Refugees have no choice. You do,' the international response to the Rohingya
crisis has been rather too slow and too safely guarded.
The Government in Bangladesh has pushed back fleeing Rohingya
refugees seeking asylum. “Bangladesh
never signed any kind of international act, convention or law for allowing and
giving shelter to refugees,” said the foreign minister Dipu Moni recently.
“That’s why we are not bound to provide shelter to the Rohingyas.” But how can Bangladesh
ignore its obligations – not just islamically, but also under international
obligations? Has she forgotten that Bangladesh itself was born in 1971
amid a massive refugee crisis? And now to deny such humanitarian help to
suffering Rohingyas is simply inexcusable!
As noted by investigative journalist Dan Morrison,
Bangladeshi officials might have served their case better by condemning the
violence while pointing out that Bangladesh is among the world’s poorest and
most densely populated countries, that in 1978 and 1991 it sheltered
Rohingyas fleeing ethnic cleansing in Myanmar and that as it struggles to meet
the aspirations of its 160 million citizens, it cannot consider another
“temporary” influx of refugees. Instead Dr. Dipu Moni’s statements came across
as callous at a time when images of suffering Rohingyas are being
flashed across the world.
No action has been taken by the world community to either
prevent a repeat of genocidal campaigns against the persecuted Rohingya people
or punish repeat offenders - those responsible within the Union (of Myanmar),
state and local government, and the civilian provocateurs of hatred.
Interestingly, while the ultra-racist provocateurs within the Burmese and
Rakhine Buddhist community continue to justify the denial of citizenship rights
to the Rohingyas of Burma, and preach and provide material aid for
extermination campaigns against them, many of these hypocritical monsters have
no moral bites to living as naturalized citizens in countries like the UK and the USA . Nothing has been done to stop
these neo-Nazi spiritual children of Julius Streicher amongst the Buddhist
community of Burma .
But if the world community is serious to stop the refugee
crisis, it is not too late. It can still stop the bleeding process by ensuring
that violence against targeted minorities is a crime. It can stop such war
crimes by bringing the advocates and perpetrators of crime to justice either
through the local government agencies or the World Court in the Hague . And above all, it can pressure its
governments to not reward the criminal state.
Sadly, however, morality is long gone in our world, and is
replaced by hypocrisy. And this fact is well known amongst the perpetrators of
such war crimes, and thus, there is no end of such crimes in a foreseeable
future. Consider, e.g., the governments in the USA
and the UK
(and there are plenty of such examples). The Obama administration has lately
announced that it would waive longstanding sanctions on investment and financial
services in Burma .
The new policy does not restrict U.S.
companies from partnering with Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE), Burma ’s
state-owned oil company and the main source of revenue for the previous
military government. The decision was timed to coincide with a trip by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to attend the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) summit in Cambodia .
Similar is the case with the UK . Recently, Britain ’s trade and investment department has
opened an office in Rangoon as the latest move
by the UK government to
increase its presence in Burma .
According to a report by The Telegraph, the opening of the new trade office
came during a three-day visit last week by a trade delegation that included
executives of some of the UK’s most influential companies, e.g., Anglo
American, BP, British Gas, Ernst & Young, Rolls Royce and Shell.
The European Union, Australia
and other countries have also eased sanctions against Myanmar . By
lifting the investment ban, the West has lost the leverage necessary to bring
about reform, while people inside are still suffering from human rights abuses
and mass atrocities. When we reward a criminal for its crime, how can we expect
it to reform?
Remember the June 30 dateline set by the Thein Sein
government for an inquiry report on current violence in the Arakan (Rakhine) state,
triggered by the lynching of ten tablighi Muslims (visiting from Rangoon) on
June 3? It came and went. No one has heard anything about that report.
Instead, what the world community heard lately is simply
bizarre! Myanmar
presidential office released a statement last week citing that it would not
recognize the Rohingya and would hand over responsibility for them to the UN’s
refugee agency in Arakan
State , adding that it was
also “willing to send the Rohingyas to any third country that will accept
them.” How wonderful! So, just like that a minority Muslim community that has
known no other home outside the Buddhist-majority country is now treated as if
they are outsiders, thus, ducking responsibility of the Myanmar government,
which not only has failed to prevent the crisis but also has been a
partner-in-crime in what appears to be a well-orchestrated pogrom against the
Rohingya Muslims of Arakan. It has neither allowed foreign journalists to get
to the troubled area, nor has it allowed foreign NGOs to come to the aid of the
internally displaced minorities. What a travesty! This behavior is typical of a
lawless ‘Mogher Mulluk’ with no accountability, no justice and no fair play. It
is simply disgusting!
The Rohingyas are being targeted for this horrendous crime
simply because of their race and religion. Looking darker and closer to the
South Asian race (found in Bangladesh and India) as opposed to the more
oriental (Mongoloid) looking majority – the Rakhines in the Arakan state and
the majority Bamar inside Myanmar, and being Muslims as opposed to Buddhist,
the Rohingya have been targets of state sponsored ethnic cleansing.
Of course, the denial of citizenship rights of the
indigenous Rohingyas of Arakan is nothing new, and did not start with Thein
Sein’s statement last week; it started full-blown from the Ne Win era. A series
of ethnic cleansing drives has since been launched by the military regime, in
full cooperation of the racist Buddhist elements within the Arakan state and Burma . Thus,
before the 1982 Citizenship Law was enacted, there were Shwe Kyi Operation
(1959), Kyi Gan Operation (1966), Ngazinka Operation (1967-69), Myat Mon
Operation (1969-71), Major Aung Than Operation (1973), Sabe Operation
(1974-78), Naga Min (King Dragon) Operation (1978-79) – which alone saw the
forced exodus of some 300,000 Rohingyas to Bangladesh, Shwe Hintha Operation
(1978-80), and Galone Operation (1979). Lest we forget, after 1982, there was
the infamous Pyi Thaya Operation of 1991-92, which again saw the forced exodus
of some 268,000 Rohingyas out of Burma . The aim of all these
genocidal campaigns has been crystal clear: deny all the rights to the
Rohingyas; falsely claim that they are outsiders from Bangladesh, or more
specifically from Chittagong; continue periodic extermination campaigns with
support from the local Rakhine Buddhist community; drive them out of the
apartheid state of Burma by making their lives simply unbearable and miserable.
While this slow but steady genocidal campaign has been
going on inside apartheid Burma for more than half a century, with little
notice from the outside world (after all, the country still remains closed to
most foreign journalists and international monitoring agencies), draconian
measures violating each one of the 30 Articles of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights were taken to ensure that the remaining Rohingyas opt out. And
surely the evil strategy has been working: majority of the Rohingyas are now
refugees outside Burma .
Those daring to stay within remain the most persecuted people on earth. They
have no freedom of any kind, in much contrast to most of us living outside who
take such privileges for granted.
With the so-called reforms initiated by the new regime of
Thein Sein (a former military general) since last year, our hopes have been rather
high imagining that his is a departure from the feudal past, and that he understands
what it would take for his most impoverished country of Southeast
Asia to survive and prosper in the 21st century. No, we are wrong.
Nothing truly has changed inside Myanmar . It remains locked in its
savage, feudal/imperial past. Racism and bigotry remain the apartheid character
of this Buddhist majority country to drive out others, making the country
exclusively for the majority race and religion.
It is not difficult to understand why Suu Kyi, the
so-called democracy icon, remained noticeably silent on the subject of
anti-Rohingya prejudice. Through her silence to condemn gross violations of
human rights of a persecuted community, she has proven to be another immoral
politician that cannot be trusted as a leader. Many of her supporters within
the Rakhine and Burmese Buddhist communities are part of the country’s ‘pro-democracy’
movement. They are outright hostile to non-Buddhists and Rohingyas of Burma.
Thus, there is no camouflaging any more. The so-called
democracy movement has been a farce; its leaders have proven that they are
nothing more than neo-fascists of our time. Their brand of democracy is for
their particular race and religion only. It is not of inclusion but only of
exclusion. There is no place for a Shan, a Kachin, a Karen, and of course, a
Rohingya, and countless nameless ethnic and minority groups in that equation.
There is no place for a non-Buddhist in Myanmar . Period! Thus, the state
remains at war everywhere inside.
More than 70,000 people have been displaced in the north
by the on-going conflict between the Kachin Independence Army and the Burmese
Army. On 6 July, nearly 1,500 residents in Panghsai township, near the border
with China , attempted to
cross into China
after being ordered to evacuate their villages by the Burmese army. The
refugees were then driven back into Burma by Chinese border guards. The
displaced communities are now living in makeshift tents on the Burmese side,
near the Chinese border and in Myitkyina, while others continue to hide in the
jungle. In spite of a recent peace agreement with the Karens, some 60,000
officially recognized refugees still live in camps along the Thailand-Burma
border. According to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
the total number of refugees (including the Rohingyas) living in nine camps
along the Thai-Burma border is 150,000. There are some 50,000 refugees (of
various ethnic groups) that live in Northeast India and another 12,000 living
in temporary settlements inside Malaysia .
And as to the Rohingyas, more than a million are now living as refugees in Saudi Arabia , the Gulf
States , Pakistan ,
Bangladesh , Thailand , Malaysia ,
Japan
and elsewhere. The UNHCR estimates that some 91,000 people (mostly Rohingyas)
have been affected by the latest extermination campaign against the Rohingyas
of Arakan.
On July 11, Antonio Guterres, the UNHCR chief, met Thein
Sein in Naypyidaw. He told reporters at a press conference in Rangoon the following day that the Rohingyas
are an internally displaced people. He said, “The resettlement programs
organized by UNHCR are for refugees who are fleeing a country to another, in
very specific circumstances. Obviously, it’s not related to this situation.”
The latest salvo from Thein Sein once again shows that the
Rohingya community is in a perilous situation. In recent weeks, villages
belonging to the Rohingya have been burnt to the ground, whilst refugees
fleeing to other countries have been refused entry and left to fend for
themselves onboard rickety boats on rough seas. The Myanmar Government refuses
to accept the Rohingya people as citizens, who as such have no rights in a
country they call their motherland. This treatment of its inhabitants is in
contravention of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights articles 3, 6, 13,
15, and 16. Reports covered by the Guardian of UK have suggested mass burning,
looting and murder of Rohingya men, women and children. Anti-Muslim prejudice
is endemic in Burmese society.
It’s a shame to think that many Burmese, who suffered for
so long under military dictatorship, harbor such racism and bigotry.
As noted by human rights group, this issue is much larger
than a Myanmar-only problem; it is fast becoming one of the worst cases of
ethnic cleansing alongside the likes of Rwanda
and Bosnia . Can the world community afford to witness
another such crisis in our time? If not, what should it do to stop the massacre
of the Rohingyas of Burma?
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