An Open Letter to President Obama
Dear Mr. President,
I am somewhat puzzled by your decision
to visit Myanmar ,
which has the worst records of human rights in our planet. As an overture to
your trip, your administration has recently
lifted import restrictions on Myanmar ,
broadly authorizing Myanmar-origin goods to enter the United States
for the first time in almost a decade. So, you can understand why like so many
other concerned human rights activists, I am at a loss to understand your
rationale for the trip.
I am sure your administration is well
aware of Myanmar
government’s apartheid policy and its monumental crimes against its own people,
esp. the Rohingya, who remain the worst persecuted people in our time. The root
cause of the Rohingya people lies with the 1982 Citizenship Law, which is at
odds with scores of international laws. This law, formulated during the hated
dictator Ne Win’s era, has effectively made the Rohingya people stateless in
their ancestral homeland. President Thein Sein’s quasi-civilian government promised
reform from its criminal past, but, sadly, continues to follow the footsteps of
its evil predecessors and ignore the calls from the international community to reform
or revoke that age-old racist and highly discriminatory law.
The Myanmar government, a member of the
United Nations, continues to deny human rights of the Rohingya people, ignoring
all of the thirty Articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It is
guilty of practicing a slow but steady genocidal campaign against the unarmed
Rohingya civilian population, which has resulted in forced exodus of nearly two
million Rohingya people who live as unwanted refugees in many parts of our
world, including countries like Thailand
and Bangladesh .
While this figure of 2 million – nearly half the Rohingya population – may not
sound too large to you, but just reflect for a moment that this is equivalent
to forced expulsion of 170 million of the U.S. population.
Surely, such a gross racism and bigotry
has no place in our time! And yet, such evil twins have become the defining
characteristics of today’s Myanmar
and its chauvinist Buddhist population. It is no accident that a Myanmar diplomat U Ye Myint Aung working in Hong Kong called the dark brown-complexioned Rohingya
people “ugly as ogres.” How would you, Mr. President, who is equally
dark brown, have felt if such hateful comments were made about you, your wife
and your children? Just take a look at the postings by racist Burmese and
Rakhines in the Internet to understand the depth of ugliness of today’s Myanmarism. It is no accident either that Suu Kyi,
through her appalling silence, endorses the current extermination campaign
against the Rohingya.
Mr. President, the United Nations defines ethnic cleansing as the
‘purposeful policy designed by one
ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the
civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain
geographic areas.’ As the never-ending episodes of violence clearly
demonstrate what the Rohingyas are facing is nothing short of ethnic cleansing
by fellow Rakhines that is participated by state security forces, politicians,
and government officers.
Ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya people
has truly become a national project in today’s Myanmar that enjoys wide support from
within the Buddhist population. In recent months, the Rakhine Buddhist
terrorists and their patrons and partners-in-crime within the government -
central and local - have uprooted more than a hundred thousand Rohingya people,
let alone torched hundreds of Rohingya villages and townships. Muslim parts of
the most of the towns and cities within the Rakhine state have simply been
wiped out, as if they are bombed out places reminiscent of the Second World
War. With homes, shops, schools, businesses, mosques, crops and cattle burned
down, the Rohingya people are forced to either risk the high seas to seek a
shelter anywhere or settle for segregated prison-like concentrations camps
outside Sittwe (Akyab) in the Rakhine state. Regrettably, the Government of
Bangladesh continues to deny them shelter. In recent days, hundreds have died
in the Bay of Bengal . Thousands have also died
as a result of the latest genocidal campaign.
Deemed stateless by the ultra-racist
1982 Citizenship Law, where will the Rohingya go and who will shelter them?
What excuse does the world community, especially the powerful nations like the USA , have to stop this greatest crime committed
by the Myanmar
government and its racist elements within the society in our time?
Mr. President, please, read US
photographer Greg Constantine’s recently released book “Exiled to Nowhere: Burma ’s
Rohingya” to understand their human stories. He relates the story
of 20-year-old Kashida who had to flee to Bangladesh with her husband. The
Burmese authorities had denied her permission to get married, but when they
discovered she had married in secret and was pregnant they took away all her
family’s money and cows and goats. They forced Kashida to have an abortion,
telling her: “This is not your country; you don’t have the right to
reproduce here.” What atrocity and
what brutality, and yet no relief for this unfortunate people! Rape has become
a weapon of war to terrorize this people.
President Thein Sein is guilty of
speaking with a forked tongue. He reneged on his agreement with the OIC. He is
averse to international observers and an independent UN Commission of Inquiry.
He likes to hide his regime’s crimes. He is not serious about securing the
lives and properties of the non-Buddhist Rohingya people.
Last Friday, 3,000 Rakhine Buddhist
terrorists surrounded the village of Paik Thae in Kyauktaw
Township to evict
the Muslim inhabitants. On Saturday morning some
200 security forces and Burmese Army soldiers entered the Muslim village of Anaryme in Pauktaw and ordered the
Muslim villagers to leave their houses and the village. They have evicted these
Muslims from their homes so that the security forces and soldiers can live in
them. How can our generation allow such crimes of forced eviction?
As I write on Saturday, 50 ponds in Rohingya villages of U Hla Pe
and Rwa Nyo Daung in Buthidaung
Township have been found
to be poisoned by Rakhine terrorists. It was aimed at killing the Rohingyas of
those villages who depend on those ponds for drinking water.
Dear Mr. President, the list of such daily abuse,
harassment, persecution and slow but steady genocidal campaign to wipe out the
Rohingya and Muslim identity of Arakan and Myanmar is long and simply
unacceptable. It needs to be stopped. Your visit to Myanmar should not and cannot be
interpreted as an endorsement
of the devious policies of the Thein Sein government which wants to push out
the Rohingya minorities one way or another.
I, therefore, urge you to press President Thein Sein for genuine
democratic reform, national reconciliation and restoration of human rights, and
an end to genocidal campaign against the
Rohingya and grant them citizenship on par with other ethnic nationalities.
I urge you to insist that if the Myanmar government is desirous of a friendly
relationship with the USA ,
it must allow safe, timely and unhindered access of international media and
rights groups across the Rakhine (Arakan) state to monitor and thus, act as a
deterrent to any future pogrom against the Rohingya minorities. It must support
UN peace-keeping forces being sent to Arakan for the purpose of preventing
final solution of the Rohingya problem. It must also allow the UN to conduct
unbiased inquiry and to send independent international observers to the troubled
region. Like the Rohingyas in the Rakhine state, some 90,000 people have also
been internally displaced in the Kachin state who are denied humanitarian aid
by the Thein Sein regime. Therefore, you must stress
the urgent need to allow international aid to reach the Rohingya and other
affected minorities for security conditions that would allow them to return to
their homes safely. The Myanmar
government must also compensate the victims.
In 1994, Rwanda
witnessed genocide in which more than half a million Tutsis were killed. The Clinton administration
did not act quickly enough after the killing began and failed to call the
crimes by their rightful name: genocide. Four years later, President Clinton
and the First Lady Hilary Rodham Clinton visited the capital city of Kigali to apologize for
the international community's failure to stop the genocide. I pray and hope
that we shall be spared of a repeat of that sad episode of American indecision
to come to the rescue of an endangered people.
Mr. President, the
Rohingyas are victims of genocide in Myanmar . No linguistic camouflage
of the yesteryears can hide this ugly truth. Please, have the moral authority
to call a spade a spade, and stop this genocide, failing which, I am afraid,
the Rohingyas will be an extinct community. Simply put, the human rights of the Rohingya and other
affected minorities cannot take a backseat when they face extermination. It
would be the greatest crime under your watch! Please, stop the extinction of
the Rohingyas of Myanmar.
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