Showing posts with label Genocide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genocide. Show all posts

Friday, 17 August 2018

The Religious Freedom Institute and the Rohingya Crisis and Genocide




August 15, 2018, Washington, D.C.—On August 25, 2017, a wave of violence was unleashed against the Rohingya people in Rakhine state, Burma. In the nearly one year since those attacks, the global response to this crisis has been shameful. In a new report, The Rohingya Crisis: The Shameful Global Response to Genocide and the Assault on Religious Freedomthe Religious Freedom Institute highlights this crisis and puts forward a call to action.

The atrocities committed against the Rohingya were of the worst kinds imaginable. As mounting evidence has made clear, the attacks were more than just a response to provocation by armed Rohingya, but were carried out with planning and were the outgrowth of long-standing religious hostilities and tensions.
“What I heard firsthand from Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh of children ripped from their parent’s arms is among the worst I have witnessed in my career,” said Kent Hill, Executive Director of the Religious Freedom Institute. “The world faces a grave challenge. Will it stand aside as it did in Rwanda and the Balkans (for far too long) when genocide and ethnic cleansing were occurring? Or will it put meaningful and effective pressure on the government of Burma and the military, to end the campaign of Burman Buddhist nationalism, one which subjugates some minorities to a second-class status and excludes others from full citizenship?”  

These violations of religious freedom and acts of genocide against the Rohingya of Burma cannot go unanswered. The failure to respond to earlier violence against the Rohingya allowed the atrocities of 2017 to occur. There are now new signs of similar targeting of other minority groups, particularly in Kachin state.

The international community, individual governments, and faith leaders and their congregants around the world, must not be silent in the face of such a blatant assault on religious freedom and such a violent act of genocide.

In his forward to the report, Benedict Rogers, East Asia Team Leader, CSW and an RFI Senior Fellow, said, “Drawing on a range of sources, [this report] tells a story of an unfolding ethnic cleansing, perhaps a genocide, with a clear religious as well as racial dimension. It should serve as a powerful reminder to policy-makers of the severity of this tragedy, and ensure that we do not allow this crisis to be forgotten or impunity to reign
The Religious Freedom Institute (RFI) works to secure religious freedom for everyone, everywhere. The RFI is a non-profit, non-partisan organization based in Washington, D.C.
Media Contact: Jeremy P. Barker
media@religiousfreedominstitute.org
202-838-7734

Friday, 26 January 2018

Buddhist Myanmar and the Muslim Rohingyas

Some thoughts from The Editor of Beside The Creek on which readers might ponder as they read this article:

Firstly, so many Westerners have romantic ideas about Buddhism as a peaceful religion and lifestyle.  So what do such people make of what is happening in Myanmar?   Christianity professes peace too and we know that it has had difficulty in bearing witness to this attribute.  So what do we think when Buddhism is acting in a violent way to a whole class of people on the basis of their religion? Is this in the same category as Nazi Germany and the Jews?

Secondly, what is the role - from an objective viewpoint - of the role of Aung San Suu Kyi in what is happening in Myanmar.  Aung San Suu Kyi is a feted woman who has lived a life of privilege.  True, she has had her enemies and difficulties.  However, in no way can we see that she has suffered in the way the Rohingyas have suffered and are suffering. She has not been the victim of genocide as the Rohingyas have been and continue to be. Powerful people around the world are on her side. It is difficult to say who or what is on the side of the Rohingyas that will free them from their suffering and allow them to return to their homeland. 

Reworking the Colonial-Era “Indian Peril”: Myanmar’s State-directed Persecution of Rohingyas and Other Muslims

“It would be best if they were not here. I do not want to see them in this country. Since the dawn of history Indians have been the leaders of attacks against the Burmans on behalf of the white faces.”
— Saithan (Burmese writer), New Light of Burma, 6th June 19371
“(Buddhist) Brother, you might already have heard of the news about the Buddhist mob in Rakhine lynching a group of Rohingyas in broad day light. Even in Yangon if you are a Muslim and say something wrong or behave slightly irritated at a teashop or a bus stop the Buddhists would howl “you mother-fucking Kalar (nigger), how dare you say something or behave like that.” If you go to certain neighbourhoods and run into a group of drunkards they recognize your Indian features and beat you up. So, I too fear for my life living in this country of ours. I was born here. And this is the only country I know I belong. Burmese is my mother tongue. Out of fear and despair, I have looked at different possibilities of going to work in Malaysia or trying visa lottery to USA. But the truth is I don’t really have any prospect for leaving my birthplace. I am stuck here.”
— A Burmese Muslim resident, 7 July 20172

Friday, 15 September 2017

Sikhs to the aid of the Muslim Rohingyas fleeing the Buddhists of Burma

Please note:
The Sikhs themselves know what it is to feel for one's life.
They were forced to flee India after partition in 1947.

Sikh volunteers say they have begun handing out food and water to Rohingya refugees fleeing violence in Burma.
The Khalsa Aid charity said volunteers from its India arm were "working in tough conditions on the border areas" in Bangladesh to provide aid.
The group, which is registered within the UK, had reportedly reached the village of Teknaf in the Cox's Bazar area, which has become a crossing point for tens of thousands of Rohingya.
Dozens of Rohingya villages now lie empty after their residents fled violence in Rakhine state, according to Burma's government. One hundred and seventy-six of 471 villages were abandoned, spokesman Zaw Htay said.
Amarpreet Singh, managing director of Khalsa Aid India, told The Indian Express: "We had come prepared for providing relief to some 50,000 people, but there are more than three lakh [300,000] refugees here. They are living without water, food, clothes and shelter. They are sitting wherever they can find a corner."
Refugee camps had become overcrowded, he added.
Rohingya Muslims face widespread persecution in Buddhist-majority Burma, where the recent violence has driven hundreds of thousands to seek refuge overseas.
Zaw Htay did not use the name Rohingya. Members of the ethnic group are commonly referred to as "Bengalis" by many in Burma who insist they migrated illegally from Bangladesh.

He also said Burma would not allow all people who fled to return. He said: "We have to verify them. We can only accept them after they are verified."
The government blames the Rohingya for the violence, but journalists who visited the region found evidence that raises doubts about its claims that Rohingya set fire to their own homes. 
Many of the Rohingya who flooded into refugee camps in Bangladesh told of Burmese soldiers shooting indiscriminately, burning their homes and warning them to leave or die. Others said they were attacked by Buddhist mobs.