It can hardly be said to be an unreasonable
plea. Sadly, it may be a hopeless one-for those making the appeal- the Rohingya
people of Burma- are not treated like human beings. Instead, they are a stateless
minority, suffering from the continual threat of racist violence from
their neighbours. This year 100,000 or more have been driven from their homes
by mob attacks, which destroyed entire villages and neighbourhoods.
Sources within Burma have sent a
plethora of photos, pixellated phone videos, and messages to me this week,
desperate to share visible records of their suffering. The refugee camp protest
photo is certainly among the least upsetting files I've received. Some appear
to show the victims of ethnic violence in June; others appear to be from last
month's equally bloody riots. They are, for the most part, harrowing and
gruesome: shots of dead babies; corpses putrefying on beaches; young people
shot in the groin or stomach; purported torture victims. Such horrors, I am
told, are the result of intentional pogroms - not mere "ethnic skirmishes" as
some have portrayed events.
In addition to visual evidence, I
have received compelling witness testimony. One source from Sittwe told me that
he had clearly observed police involvement in some of this year's violence. He
stated that a group of thousands of Rakhine "including police, security forces" had surrounded the
Rohingya area in June and that "everybody [in the mob] had a sword, some had
weapons, some guns." He saw that houses were subjected to arson attacks, after
which time the occupants fled their homes only to be attacked by the crowd.
"Rakhine started killing us, our people tried to protect [themselves]…at that
time police shot us."
Such claims of systematic, discriminatory violence are supported by independent
analysis. Andrew Heyn, Britain's ambassador to Burma told Radio 4
recently that "there's compelling
evidence, that this latest wave of attacks [against the Rohingya]...were
pre-planned, coordinated and organised."
Adding to the case for high-level
involvement, a Reuters
investigation released this weekend
quoted senior political sources as stating that the recent attacks against
Rohingya were "led by Rakhine nationalists tied to a powerful political
party in the state, incited by Buddhist monks, and… abetted at times by local
security forces."
It's clear that the Rohingya have also been the target of hostility from a large
number of Buddhist monks, who are influential among the population. Yet one prominent
Buddhist figure has spoken out, arguing that political forces are seeking to
stir up inter-communal animosities for their own gain. Ashin Gambhira, a monk who was heavily
involved in 2007's brutally suppressed Saffron
revolution, wrote recently: "the
neo-military dictatorship has exploited and fostered a new national crisis, a
religious conflict, the Rakhine-Rohingya conflict, for its own purposes… These clashes were encouraged by the
military."
American human
rights advocate Dr. Nora Rowley, drawing on her experience of working in Burma,
told me that the attacks on the Rohingya were "absolutely" being backed by
members of the former military junta, now incorporated into the political elite.
She suggested "what we need right now is to connect the regime with what's
going on so the international community know it's not an internal matter."
I asked her
what she believes will happen if nothing is done to protect the victims.
"Ethnic cleansing completion," was her terse reply.
The recent news that Barack Obama
is set to visit Burma's President Thein Sein in coming days has been the source
of some hope to those that imagine he may seek to press Burma on the plight of
the Rohingya. Yet there is room for pessimism: American business interests in
the country are strong, as are geo-political
concerns - Burma sits between two regional powers, India and China, and
Washington will be mindful of the importance of gaining a stronger foothold in
the strategically-positioned country. As
a result, Obama may not push too hard on an issue that is domestically
controversial in order to advance other agendas.
However, as I have argued before, the safety of the imperiled
Rohingya people is an issue of major concern to those who value the rights of
threatened minorities - and the shame will belong to all of us if the world
fails to prevent an entirely predictable humanitarian catastrophe in the near
future. More has to be done.
Source: http://www.news.myanmaronlinecentre.com/2012/11/13/obama-is-set-to-visit-burma-but-will-he-help-the-tormented-rohingya-people/
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