By Hamza Fareed Malik
Oct. 4,
2020
The
Rohingya are a Muslim ethnic minority group in Myanmar (Burma), Southeast Asia.
They make up the largest percentage of Muslims in the country. The Rohingya are
not considered a people of Myanmar and are denied citizenship in the country,
effectively making them stateless. At the start of 2017, about one million
Rohingya Muslims resided in Myanmar’s Rakhine state. That number has been
reduced to half.
United
Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described the Rohingya as “one of,
if not the, most discriminated people in the world”. Since 2017, they have been
brutally targeted by the Myanmar military, with whole villages burned down and
masses slaughtered. United Nations’ investigators have accused the army of
carrying out a genocidal campaign towards the Rohingya Muslim population living
in the state. In 2017, then-United States Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
classified the army’s actions as ethnic cleansing. More than one million
Rohingya have fled to neighbouring Bangladesh in the past three years,
sheltering in the world’s largest refugee camp.
Orchestrated attacks against the Rohingya have been carried out for years now and eventually culminated into a full-on mass extermination event reminiscent of the Holocaust. The Rohingya genocide gained renewed attention this year. The International Court of Justice at the Hague ruled in January 2020 that Myanmar must do everything possible to protect its Rohingya population, rejecting Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s, a Nobel Peace Prize winner and one-time champion of human rights, assertions that there is no such genocide. She appeared in front of the Hague last year to answer for the allegations of genocide and has been widely criticised for her refusal to condemn or even accept the military’s actions. The Myanmar government has repeatedly denied the occurrence of any orchestrated violence against the Rohingya.
A ground-breaking report in The New York Times this month also reignited public interest in the Rohingya massacre. The report detailed the genocide and mass human rights violations committed by the Myanmar army, known as the Tatmadaw, against the Rohingya Muslims, with two former soldiers who had been actively involved in the atrocities giving their personal accounts.
Myo Win Tun
and Zaw Naing Tun are the first members of the Tatmadaw to openly confess to
taking part in the genocide. The soldiers claimed to have wiped out dozens of
villages and murdered scores of innocent men, women, and children, throwing
their bodies in mass graves. “Kill all you see, whether children or adults,”
was the order they say they were given by their commanding officers. Their
battalions burned down whole villages and raped numerous women. The testimony
by the soldiers is the first piece of evidence from the direct perpetrators of
the crime, corroborating evidence collected from witnesses including the
numerous Rohingya refugees.
“This is a
monumental moment for Rohingya and the people of Myanmar in their ongoing
struggle for justice,” said Matthew Smith, CEO of Fortify Rights, a human
rights watchdog. “These men could be the first perpetrators from Myanmar tried
at the ICC, and the first insider witnesses in the custody of the court.”
The crimes
committed by the soldiers’ battalions are just part of the vicious ongoing
assault launched by the Myanmar authorities three years ago. Survivors and
witnesses of this massacre said they saw government soldiers stabbing children,
cutting off boys’ heads, gang-raping girls, blowing up houses, burning entire
families to death, and rounding up dozens of unarmed villagers and executing them.
The UN human rights office said that government troops had targeted “houses,
fields, food-stocks, crops, livestock and even trees,” making it “almost
impossible” for the Rohingya to return home. Entire villages have been razed
and the Rohingya’s homes and all traces of them have been under attack.
Thousands of Rohingya have been killed and hundreds of villages destroyed.
The latest
genocidal campaign began in August 2017 after a series of attacks by a group of
Rohingya militants calling itself the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) on
Myanmar military and police outposts killed more than seventy people. In
response, the army launched a vicious crackdown on Rohingya villages in Rakhine
state which caused the mass exodus of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya to
Bangladesh and started the present-day genocide.
Widespread
reports indicate indiscriminate killings and burning of Rohingya villages,
escalating to the point that the UN Human Rights Commissioner called the
situation in Myanmar “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”
The 2017
military crackdown was preceded by a similar attack on a security post along
the Bangladeshi border in 2016 which killed nine police officers. The army
responded to that with a month-long crackdown on unarmed Rohingya civilians,
causing over 1,000 civilian deaths and driving tens of thousands more to flee
their homes. In 2016, a UN official accused the government of carrying out
ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya. It was not the first time such an accusation
had been made. In April 2013, HRW said Myanmar was conducting a campaign of
ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya. The government has consistently denied
such accusations.
Violence
between Rohingya Muslims and the Rakhine-native Buddhists has been prevalent
for a long time. The Rohingya face discrimination both from their neighbours
and their own home country. Buddhist nationalist groups regularly call for
boycotts of Muslim shops, the expulsion of Muslims from Myanmar, and attacks on
Muslim communities.
The
Rohingya are not recognised as one of Myanmar’s 135 official ethnic groups due
to a 1982 law that stripped them of citizenship and restricted their rights to
study, work, travel, marry, practice their religion, and access health
services. They cannot vote, and limits are placed on them entering certain
professions such as medicine or law or running for office. Nearly all of the
Rohingya in Myanmar live in Rakhine state and are not allowed to leave without
government permission. It is one the poorest states in the country, with
ghetto-like camps and a lack of basic services and opportunities.
This
aversion to the Rohingya started during the British rule over the Indian
subcontinent from 1824 to 1948. There was significant migration of labourers to
what is now Myanmar from today’s India and Bangladesh. This migration was
viewed negatively by the majority of the native population. After independence,
the Myanmar government viewed the migration as illegal, and refused citizenship
to the majority of Rohingya, according to HRW.
Azeem
Ibrahim, a Scottish academic, said that much of the animosity could also be
traced to World War II, when the Rohingya fought on the British side and many
Buddhists in Rakhine fought for the occupying Japanese. After the Allies won,
the Rohingya hoped to win independence or join East Pakistan (today’s
Bangladesh), which was also majority Muslim and ethnically similar to the
Rohingya. But the British decided that the Rohingya areas would become part of
newly independent Myanmar (then Burma). Myanmar’s leaders soon began stripping
the Rohingya’s rights and blaming them for the country’s shortcomings, claiming
the Rohingya were illegal migrants from Bangladesh who had stolen land. Some
Buddhist monks said the Rohingya were the reincarnation of snakes and insects
and should be exterminated, like vermin. The persecution fuelled a new Rohingya
militant movement, which staged attacks against Myanmar security forces until
things blew up in August 2017.
The Myanmar
government’s consistent refusal to acknowledge the occurrence of any such
violence echoes China’s denial of the Tiananmen Square massacre and Turkey’s
denial of the Armenian genocide. Disinformation and rewriting history are
expected when the corrupt and sanctimonious take power. Aung San Suu Kyi accused
the Rohingya and their supporters for spreading fake news and creating an
“iceberg of misinformation.” Myanmar’s military has accused Rohingya of burning
down their own homes to garner international sympathy. During her argument at
the Hague, Suu Kyi did not use the words Rohingya, a term rejected by the
Myanmar government, who refused to recognise the Rohingya and call them
Bengalis instead.
The Myanmar
government’s consistent refusal to acknowledge the occurrence of any such
violence echoes China’s denial of the Tiananmen Square massacre and Turkey’s
denial of the Armenian genocide
International
response to the atrocities has been mixed. While the ICJ and UN have taken
notice, some of the world’s most powerful countries have stood by silently.
Countries like China, Russia, and India in particular have complex
relationships with their own domestic Muslim population and have as such
avoided chiding Myanmar. The treatment of Uyghur Muslims, Kashmiri Muslims, and
Chechen Muslims by China, India, and Russia respectively attracted
international condemnation not dissimilar to that received by Myanmar. Each
state believes that these minority groups pose a threat to the territorial
integrity of their countries and so has been repressing and subjugating them.
Therefore, any criticism or action taken against Myanmar can call into question
the policies of these nations against their own Muslim populations.
Western
response however has been more vocal, with news organisations like the BBC and
The New York Times publishing frequent reports on the Rohingya crisis. US
President Donald Trump and his administration have also been very critical of
Myanmar’s treatment of the Rohingya, placing sanctions on Myanmar in response
to the genocide.
The
response of the Islamic world has led to some progress as well, with the ICJ
case being filed by the Muslim nation of the Gambia with support of the 57
nations of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation. The case led to a victory
ruling for the Rohingya, but ICJ rulings have no international effect unless
the UN Security Council enforces them. Whether or not that will happen remains
to be seen. As of now, over 1,000,000 Rohingya Muslims find themselves without
a home.
Original Headline: Rohingya Muslims: the most
persecuted group in the world
Source: The Boar Org
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/myanmar’s-refusal-rohingya-persecution-echoes/d/123045
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