Friday, September 08, 2017

Stop the Genocide Against Rohingya Muslims


In Mayanmar now, history is repeating itself but with a genocidal twist. Rohingya Muslims, considered the world’s most persecuted minority, have lived for 150 years in Myanmar’s far western Rakhine state. Denied citizenship by the military junta since 1982, they have been stateless and without the most basic human rights, thus prey to indiscriminate rape, torture and killing by Buddhist militants and civilians alike.

In recent days, however, eyewitness accounts of mass rape, killing and ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims has horrified the world. Families, including newborns, have been slaughtered and burned alive. United Nations officials report that tens of thousands of Rohingya women, children and men are streaming into neighboring Bangladesh after trudging through treacherous ravines and jungles, many falling along the way. Babies are dying in the cradles of their mothers.

Bangladesh, a poor country, is reeling under the burden of providing relief to the 100,000 who have fled Mayanmar in the last 2 weeks alone. This is in addition to the already half-a-million Rohingyas in the Cox’s Bazar district and adjoining villages living in squalid, unhygienic camps. (Growing up in Bangladesh, I visited Cox's Bazar and its adjoining villages in my youth for picnics and idyllic strolls along its unbroken shoreline but now it resonates only with the suffering of Rohingya Muslims.)

For perspective, I called a journalist friend reporting from border posts along the
200-mile Bangladesh-Mayanmar border.

Mamun Abdullah manages a 24-hour News Channel called Independent TV. “Rohingya insurgents were forced to take up arms against the violence on their people,” said Mamun. “On August 25 they attacked some Mayanmar police posts. The government responded with disproportionate military force. That’s when the mass exodus began.”


The critical need of the refugees, said Mamun, is food, pure drinking water, sanitation and shelter. “That’s not available. About 50 Rohingyas with multiple bullet and burn injuries are being treated in Chittagong medical college hospital a hundred miles away. It’s like a drop in the ocean. Several have already died.”

Mamun is skeptical about the possibility of Rohingya Muslims returning to Myanmar. “Repatriation is a pipedream. Sheikh Hasina (Bangladesh’s prime minister), has praised Bangladeshis along the border for giving shelter to fleeing Rohingyas but has also said Bangladesh cannot meet the demands of the swelling refugees. It’s true, we just don’t have the facilities or the land.”

“So what’s the way out?”

“There must be international pressure to force Myanmar to stop the genocide. We have not heard anything from United States government. Only the Turkish and Indonesian governments have pledged some help so far.”

It is in the American character to serve the suffering. While it is beyond our power to control the fury of nature, as we saw with Hurricane Harvey and now with Irma, we can unite as decent human beings to do something about the deadly violence being waged against the Rohingya Muslims, and, for that matter, violence anywhere against a minority by a majority, irrespective of race and religion.

Despite the bigotry and divisiveness promoted by president Trump and his cohorts, Americans of all persuasions should contact their elected officials and lawmakers to demand that Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Peace-prize winner and the de facto leader of Myanmar, stop the torture and the killing of Rohingya Muslims. She has not said a word so far, a stance that has been denounced by many governments but unfortunately, not ours. Her silence has only emboldened Myanmar’s militants and security forces in the state-sanctioned genocide of Rohingya Muslims.

We should also call upon our government to demand that the Myanmar government give Rohingya Muslims citizenship in a country where they have lived for centuries, and to accord them the same dignity, safety and security that the Buddhist majority enjoy. A concerted effort must also be made to provide humanitarian aid to the refugees streaming into Bangladesh and to sponsor a resolution in the UN Security Council to immediately stop the genocide of Rohingya Muslims.

Some media links:













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