*http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/NewsDetail/index/4/11704/Rohingya-A-People-Condemned
<http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/NewsDetail/index/4/11704/Rohingya-A-People-Condemned>*



*Myanmar: Persecution of Rohingya Muslims*



*Ram Puniyani*



Massive protests are being witnessed in many countries, Bangla Desh,
Pakistan, India among others against the persecution of Rohingya Muslims in
Myanmar (September 2017). This time around violence seems to have been
triggered due to the attack by militants (Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army)
on police and military posts. As per UN estimates nearly 1000 Rohingyas
have been killed and over 2.5 lakh Muslims have fled to Bangla Desh to
escape the violence. UN has said that the extent of violence indicates that
it is crime against humanity. His Holiness Pope Francis said that he is
following the “sad news of the religious persecution of Rohingya community…
he asked that the members of the ethnic group be given full rights.”

The suppression of the Muslims of Rakhine province of Myanmar has created
grave situation. What seems to be going on is a sort of slow genocide,
ethnic cleansing. India has also witnessed the protests against this
suppression in many cities in India. Here in India there is an added
problem as there are thousands of Rohingya Muslims living in different
parts of the country and there is a demand from the Hindu right wingers to
expel them from the country.

These Rohingya Muslims are mainly concentrated in the Rakhine Province of
Myanmar. The Government says that they are illegal immigrants while their
history in Mynmar is very old. As such the Muslims in Myanmar are very
diverse as most of them have come from different parts of India, when
Myanmar was part of India. In particular Rakhine province earlier had a
Muslim ruler, which fact attracted many Muslims to settle there. As such it
is after the military dictatorship that they have been deprived of their
citizenship rights and have been the target of persecution and atrocities,
particular after 1982 Law, which does not recognize their citizenship
rights. Earlier they even had a minister at the Cabinet level apart from
many elected representatives.

The problems related to communalism have so many parallels in different
South Asian Countries. We see in South Asia, Pakistan, Bangla Desh, India
that religious minorities are subject to persecution and the pretexts are
very similar. After the military dictatorship came to Myanmar, the fleeing
of Muslims went up in large numbers and many of them came to India also.
These reasons are purely humanitarian, but here in India it is being
presented as if it is a security threat. Indian laws permit giving shelter
to persecuted communities. As per that Tamils from Sri Lanka, Buddhists
from Tibet and Hindus from Pakistan have been given shelter here. Since
Rohingya’s happen to be Muslims the Hindu right wing is opposing them and
has stepped up campaigns through media to expel them. As such in India the
communalists have been harping on Bangla Deshi immigrants, while the fact
is that most of the Muslims being accused of being Bangla Deshis have
migrated earlier through Human plantation policy of British, which
encouraged Bangla Deshis (then Bengal) to settle in Assam. In the aftermath
of 1971 war also many Hindus and Muslims fled Bangla Desh to settle in
different parts of India, depending on where they can get some
opportunities to survive.

In the aftermath of 1992-92 violence, the campaign to step up the expelling
of Bangldeshis from Mumbai and other cities picked up. In one of the
studies done in Mumbai by Shama Dalwai and Irfan Engineer, it was found
that most of the immigrants (Bengali speaking Muslims) have been engaged in
low end employment, as maid servants, as jari workers(artisans) etc., who
had been putting long hours for mere survival. In popular perceptions the
issue is presented as nationalist one related to security and this has been
one of the major propaganda plank around which BJP has been making inroads
in the North Eastern states, particularly Assam.

In Myanmar, the process of democratization is very slow and painful. The
military takeover in 1962 worsened the process. The military had the strong
backing of feudal elements and the many Buddhist sanghas (organized
priesthood). The hold of feudal powers in Myanmar is a great obstacle for
democracy to deepen itself. As in Pakistan (Military-Mullah), the hold of
Sanghas and military is strong here also. In Pakistan we witness that
irrespective of democratically elected Prime Minister the military wields
great power and Military-Mullah complex keeps asserting itself, affecting
the policies even of the elected representatives. In Myanmar while the
major Buddhist organization ‘Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee’, has called for
humane approach; Buddhist monks like Ashin Wirathu, very much like Sadhvis
and Sakshi Maharaj’s in India, is the major figure spreading hate against
the Muslims.

In Myanmar, the battle between these two tendencies, (military and section
of Buddhist Sangha) is strong and Prime Minister, Suu Kyi is forced to
yield to the military bosses and is part of the decision of supporting the
inhuman military action, which is like the genocide there. Suu Kyi is
hankering for power rather than upholding principles of human rights which
a Nobel laureate should do. At places campaigns are on to take back her
Nobel Prize, as Nobel should stand for defense of human rights.

In India, with the high communal polarization, Rohigya's being Muslims is
the reason enough to attribute to them the motives of militancy, and to try
to link them with terrorism. These scum of the earth need a soothing touch
as major humanitarian agencies are asking for justice for these persecuted
people in Myanmar. In India, this is a ‘add on’ issue for Hindu
communalists who have been baking their political bread in the name of
illegal immigrants from Bangla Desh. The latest in this is to try to
formulate the law where the Hindu immigrants will be granted shelter while
Muslim immigrants will be expelled by the state. Narendra Modi in his visit
to Myanmar has been silent on this crucial issue of violation of human
rights for tactical and ideological reasons i.e. due to his political
ideology.

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