Announcement of New Website: Rohingya Today (RohingyaToday.Com)
Dear Readers,
From 1st January 2019 onward, the Rohingya News Portal 'Rohingya Blogger' will be renamed and upgraded as 'Rohingya Today'. Due to this transition to a new name, our website will be available at www.rohing...
Rohingya Today | December 26, 2018
Cox's Bazaar – A Rohingya refugee working as a day labourer in a road construction project was killed in fighting between Bangladesh's army and Chakma separatist rebels in Bangladesh on Sunday (Dec 23), sources report.
A clash broke out between the Ba...
Rohingya Refugee Camps in Bangladesh
Rohingya Today | December 19, 2018
Cox's Bazaar — Bangladesh policemen beat up a teenage woman in Rohingya refugee camps in Cox's Bazaar and subsequently, obstructed justice being served to her.
Eighteen-year-old Salima Khatun was severely beaten up...
Rohingya Today
November 11, 2018
Cox's Bazaar — Bangladesh attempts to strip UNHCR-registered Rohingya refugees of their 'Refugee' Status, triggering them to go on 'Ration Strike' since November 1 out of fear of forced repatriation to Myanmar, refugees say.
Approximately 250,000 Rohi...
RB News
September 29, 2018
Buthidaung — An arbitrarily jailed Rohingya inmate has died in Buthidaung jail after being denied of proper medical treatments.
The victim, identified as 'U Abu Shama, 50, s/o U Basu Meah' from Thayet Oak village in northern Maungdaw, was sentenced to 12-year imp...
RB News
September 29, 2018
Maungdaw — Two girls were killed and a few other people arrested when the Myanmar Border Guard Police (BGP) opened fire at a Rohingya boat off the coast of 'Feran Furu (Mingalar Gyi)' village in northern Maungdaw at around 8 pm on Thursday (Sept 27).
The two girl...
Maung Zarni, leader of the Free Rohingya Coalition, speaks at a news conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan in Tokyo on Thursday. | CHISATO TANAKA
By Chisato Tanaka, Published by The Japan Times on October 25, 2018
A leader of a global network of activists for Rohingya Mu...
Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar wait to carry food items from Bangladesh's border toward a no man's land where they set up refugee camps in Tombru, Bangladesh, Sept. 15, 2017.
By William Gallo
Voice of America
September 25, 2018
Activists are criticizing a long-awaited U.S. State Departme...
By Abdul Aziz
Dhaka Tribune
August 28, 2018
The UN likened the Aug 25 crackdown in the Rakhine state to genocide
The Rohingyas have announced to observe August 25 as the "genocide day," a year after a Myanmar military crackdown forced more than 700,000 members of the ethnic minority...
By Safvan Allahverdi
Anadolu Agency
July 31, 2018
'We keep saying 'never again', but it keeps happening,' says US representative to UN Economic and Social Council
WASHINGTON -- The world has failed to end the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar, where hundreds of thousands of people were dri...
Secretary-General António Guterres (center) meets with Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazaar, Bangladesh. (Photo: UNFPA Bangladesh/Allison Joyce)
Published by UN News on July 11, 2018
Painting a grim picture of villages being burned to the ground and other “bone-chilling” accounts he heard fr...
Rohingya girls carry firewood on their heads as they make their way through Kutupalong refugee camp, June 28, 2018, in Bangladesh.
By Lisa Schlein | Published by Voice of America on July 4, 2018
GENEVA — U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein reports thousands of Ro...
By Sena Güler | Published by Anadolu Agency on December 1, 2018
Maung Zarni says he will boycott Beijing-sponsored events until the country reverses its 'troubling path'
ANKARA -- A human rights activist and intellectual said he withdrew from a Beijing-sponsored forum in London to pro...
Aung San Suu Kyi, State Counsellor of Myanmar, has been a guest at the Capitol, including in Sept. 2016. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call file photo)
By Niels Lesniewski | Published by Roll Call on July 31, 2018
Signs point to McConnell not allowing language targeting country also known as...
UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferre
High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein.
Published by UN News on July 4, 2018
Myanmar should “have some shame” after attempting to convince the world that it is willing to take back hundreds of thousands of refugees who fled an “ethnic cleansing c...
UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferre
Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Myanmar Yanghee Lee.
Published by UN News on June 27, 2018
The United Nations rights expert on Myanmar is “strongly” recommending that the International Criminal Court (ICC) investigate and prosecute those allege...
Myanmar's military has forced some 700,000 Rohingya Muslims out of Rakhine state and across the border to Bangladesh since August 2017
By AFP
June 25, 2018
Canada on Monday announced sanctions in coordination with the European Union against seven senior Myanmar officials over the Rohingy...
A Rohingya refugee is seen in Balukhali refugee camp at dawn near Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, March 28, 2018. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne
By Robin Emmott, Antoni Slodkowski
Reuters
June 25, 2018
LUXEMBOURG/YANGON -- The European Union imposed sanctions on seven senior military officials from ...
For the last 40 years, Rohingyas of Northern Arakan/Rakhine State of Myanmar (formerly Burma), have been subjected to what Amartya Sen called a "slow genocide." Since August 26, over 607,000 Rohingyas have sought refuge in Bangladesh after having fled Myanmar’s campaign of murder, arson and...
By Al Jazeera
August 10, 2017
Denied citizenship, forced from their homes, and subjected to cruelty; we investigate the plight of Myanmar's Rohingya.
Filmmakers: Salam Hindawi, Ali Kishk, Harri Grace
Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, has a population of around 51 million people. T...
By Al Jazeera
December 4, 2016
Malaysian prime minister urges foreign intervention to stop what he calls the genocide of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.
Pressure on government leaders in Myanmar is being ramped up - as Malaysia accused its neighbour of committing genocide aga...
By VICE News
November 11, 2016
In recent years, democratic reforms have swept through Myanmar, a country that for decades was ruled by a military junta. As the reforms took hold, however, things were growing progressively worse for the Rohingya, a heavily persecuted ethnic Muslim minor...
Oskar Butcher
RB Article
October 6, 2018
Every night in an unassuming shop space located in Mandalay’s 39thStreet, Lu Maw and Lu Zaw – the remaining members of the Burma’s most famous comedy trio, the Moustache Brothers – present their show: a curious combination of comedy, political sa...
Richard Potter and U Maung Kyaw Nu
Richard Potter
RB Article
July 20, 2018
Early in the morning on May 31st U Maung Kyaw Nu passed away. Maung was known by most as a political activist and president of the Burmese Rohingya Association of Thailand. He was a political prisoner in Burma ...
A survivor from Monu Fara (Photo: Ro Mayyu Ali)
Ro Mayyu Ali
RB Article
February 2, 2018
Curtly, shabby, and always redly in eyes but very tactful to pick up the collections for extortion purposes. Grabbing any Rohingya's motor-bike, a soul-ruffling terrifying entry into the village ble...
Haikal Mansor
RB Article
January 29, 2018
Widely considered as the architect of “State-counsellor” position created for Aung San Suu Kyi after Myanmar’s Constitution barred her the presidency.
Born in Katha, Sagaing Division on February 11, 1953, Abdul Gani, better known as U Ko Ni ...
Mohammed Ayub (TU), UAE
RB Article
October 22, 2017
Myanmar Military was never sincere in handling ethnics’ affairs, especially, in Rohingyas’ whose permanent home is northern Arakan. Throughout the history, military uses the Muslims population of the country for political diversion an...
(Photo: EPA)
Habib Siddiqui
RB Article
September 17, 2017
Myanmar, formerly Burma, is a resource rich country in south-east Asia, bordering Bangladesh, India, China, Laos and Thailand. The old men of the military that ran the country for more than half a century have been displaced by a...
A demonstration over identity cards at a Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh in April, 2018. Image: NurPhoto/SIPA USA/PA Images.
By Natalie Brinham | Published by Open Democracy on October 21, 2018
Wary of the past, Rohingya have frustrated the UN’s attempts to provide them with documenta...
Buddhist Nationalism in Burma
Institutionalized racism against the Rohingya Muslims led Burma to genocide
By Maung Zarni
SPRING 2013
Rohingya are categorically darker-skinned people—sometimes called by the slur “Bengali kalar.” Indeed, the lighter-skinned Buddhists of Burma...
By Euan McKirdy
CNN
April 7, 2018
As tens of millions of Americans come to grips with revelations that data from Facebook may have been used to sway the 2016 presidential election, on the other side of the world, rights groups say hatemongers have taken advantage of the social network to wid...
You've gotta love former British Ambassador Derek Tonkin!
Genocidal Khmer Rouge chaps were "delightful".
Berlin Conference organisers are "Fakes".
Apartheid was 'very complex', anti-apartheid activism was useless.
Former British Ambassador Derek Tonkin has shown no conscience, c...
The Rt. Hon. Theresa May,
MP Prime Minister Government of the United Kingdom
10 Downing Street, London SW1A 2AA
E-mail: mayt@parliament.uk
Berlin, 30th January 2018
Your Excellency
I am Khin Maung Saw, a retired lecturer in the Department of Burma Studies, Institute of Southea...
Ambassador U Kyaw Myo Htut talks to Chairman of Network Myanmar and former UK Ambassador to Vietnam, Thailand and Laos Mr Derek Tonkin (Photo: Embassy Magazine)
51 page window into a racist colonial mind of Derek Tonkin - https://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/media/uploads/files/Tonkin.pdf
From: Dem...
By M.S. Anwar | Opinion & Analysis
The Burmese (Myanmar) quasi-civilian government unleashed a large-scale violence against the minority Rohingya in the western Myanmar state of Arakan in 2012. The violence, which some wrongly frame as ‘Communal’, was carried out by the Burmese armed forces...
Wynston Lawrence
RB Analysis
October 12, 2017
Suu has spoken on Myanmar National TV channel on 12 October 2017. She would like to tell her fellows Burmese people how her government is going to confront challenges of Rohingya Crisis. This crisis has gained world attentions with terrible comme...
Ne Myo Win
RB Analysis and Opinion
September 29, 2017
Let me not detail much about the harrowing accounts of horrors that the Rohingya people in Myanmar have been going through since August 25, 2017. The world leaders such as Emmanuel Macron, Recep Erdogan and Najib Razak have ca...
By Dr Maung Zarni
RB Analaysis
September 25, 2017
Rakhine human rights activists have been found to be reading Mein Kampf when they were exiled along Thai-Burmese border towns such as Mae Sot.
Nazi symbols are often used publicly - with such public approval by those who want to extermin...
By Maung Zarni, Natalie Brinham | Published by Middle East Institute on November 20, 2018
“It is an ongoing genocide (in Myanmar),” said Mr. Marzuki Darusman, the head of the UN Human Rights Council-mandated Independent International Fact-Finding Mission at the official briefing at ...
By TRT Newsmaker
May 28, 2018
Despite its big name, Amnesty under fire for its latest report on Rohingyas: shoddy research, flimsy evidence on which questionable findings are presented as 'facts".
...
(Photo: Kevin Frayer/Getty)
By Geoff Curfman
Just Security
January 9, 2018
Over the past four months, Myanmar’s armed forces, officially known as the Tatmadaw, have driven over 600,000 Rohingya Muslims into Bangladesh, killing thousands of civilians in the process and prompting the ...
Rohingya women cry while watching a graphic video of the Tula Toli massacre in their home in Thaingkhali Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh in December. (Allison Joyce for The Washington Post)
By Jamille Bigio and Rachel Vogelstein
The Washington Post
January 4, 2018
Burma’s ethnic cle...
In this Sept. 14, 2017, file photo, Rohingya Muslim man Naseer Ud Din holds his infant son Abdul Masood, who drowned when the boat they were traveling in capsized just before reaching the shore, as his wife Hanida Begum cries upon reaching the Bay of Bengal shore in Shah Porir Dwip, Bangladesh. ...
Pope Francis interacts with a Rohingya Muslim refugee at an interfaith peace meeting in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Friday, Dec. 1, 2017. Pope Francis ordained 16 priests during a Mass in Bangladesh on Friday, the start of a busy day that will bring him face-to-face with Rohingya Muslim refugees from M...
Rohingya refugees who fled from Myanmar wait to be let through by Bangladeshi border guards after crossing the border in Palang Khali, Bangladesh October 9, 2017. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
MS Anwar
RB Opinion
November 12, 2018
Some may differ. But I believe the government of Bangladesh is ...
By Dr. Maung Zarni
September 20, 2018
NGOs destroy civil society, said a top sociologist at Columbia.
He is absolutely correct.
If Rohingyas do NOT hang together they will be hang separately.
I see the disaster or humanitarian colonialism being repeated in Rohingya situation. T...
By Habib Siddiqui
RB Opinion
May 9, 2018
The Rohingyas are victims of a ‘slow-burning genocide’ that is perpetrated as a national project in Buddhist Myanmar (formerly Burma). Some 700,000 Rohingyas have been forced out of their ancestral homes in western Rakhine (formerly Arakan) stat...
By Dr Maung Zarni
April 29, 2018
Northern Rakhine State, which is ancestral home of Rohingya need to be declared and turned into Homeland for Rohingya protected by international armed forces.
Arakan National Party (Rakhine racist party) openly opposes Rohingya presence South of Maung...
By M.S. Anwar | Opinion & Analysis
The Burmese (Myanmar) quasi-civilian government unleashed a large-scale violence against the minority Rohingya in the western Myanmar state of Arakan in 2012. The violence, which some wrongly frame as ‘Communal’, was carried out by the Burmese armed forces...
By Maung Zarni | Published by Anadolu Agency on December 15, 2018
US will not intercede, and Myanmar's neighbors see it through economic lens, so international coalition for Rohingya needed
LONDON -- The U.S. House of Representatives Thursday overwhelmingly passed a resolution ca...
Aung San Suu Kyi in 2013. Photo by Shawn Landersz on Flickr.
By Khin Mai Aung | Published by Lion's Roar on December 6, 2018
Last week, a prominent Buddhist teacher defended Aung San Suu Kyi, the Buddhist Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Myanmar civilian leader, against criticism that she i...
By Nasir Uddin | Published by South Asia Journal on November 17, 2018
The world witnessed a massive refugee situation in the borderland of Bangladesh and Myanmar in 2017, where an extreme form of brutality perpetrated by the Myanmar security forces forced hundreds of thousands Rohingya p...
By Dr. Maung Zarni
Anadolu Agency
October 5, 2018
- The writer is coordinator for strategic affairs at the Free Rohingya Coalition and adviser to the European Center for the Study of Extremism, Cambridge, UK
Five steps can be taken towards achieving justice, repatriation and the re...
A Myanmar soldier guards an area at the Sittwe airport as British foreign minister Jeremy Hunt arrives in Sittwe, Rakhine state, on September 20, 2018. (Ye Aung Thu / AFP/Getty Images)
By Irwin Cotler and Brandon Silver | Published by MACLEANS on September 21, 2018
In the wake of a UN rep...
By Tapan Bose | Published by CounterCurrents.Org on August 1, 2018
Rohingya refugees are back in the news again. On Tuesday (July 30) Mr. Rijiju, the Minister of State for Home said some of the Rohingya living in India do not have the status of “refugee” but are “illegal migrants” who wo...
Aman Ullah
RB History
August 25, 2016
The ethnic Rohingya is one of the many nationalities of the union of Burma. And they are one of the two major communities of Arakan; the other is Rakhine and Buddhist. The Muslims (Rohingyas) and Buddhists (Rakhines) peacefully co-existed in the A...
Aman Ullah
RB History
June 13, 2016
[Dr Pamela Gutman was the first Australian to complete a doctorate in Asian Art, specializing in Burma. Her scholarship did much to contribute to Australian-Burmese government relations from the 1970s onwards, painting a picture of the art and cultural lif...
Aman Ullah
RB History
April 26, 2016
Mohan Ghosh wrote in his book ‘Magh Raiders of Bengal’ that, “In 8th century under the Hindu revivalist leader, Sankaracharijya, Buddhists in India were persecuted in large-scale. In Magadah, old Bihar of India, Buddhists were so ruthlessly oppressed by c...
Aman Ullah
RB History
April 19, 2016
[Maurice Stewart Collis (1889 –1973) was an administrator in Burma (Myanmar) when it was part of the British Empire, and afterwards a writer on Southeast Asia, China and other historical subjects. MS Collis was born in 1889, the son of an Irish solicitor,...
Aman Ullah
RB History
April 17, 2016
Before 10th century, Arakan was inhabited by Hindus. At that time Arakan was the gate of Hindu India to contact with the countries of the east. Morris Collis writes in his book "Burma under the iron heels of British" that the Hindu ruled Arakan from firs...
Aman Ullah
RB History
April 10, 2016
The earliest name of Arakan was ‘Kala Mukha’ (Land of the) Black Faces writes Noel Francis Singer in his book ‘Vaishali and the Indianization of Arakan’. It was inhabited by these dark brown-colored Indians who had much in common with the people (today’s...
Dr. Maung Zarni's Remark:
The best research on Rohingya history: British Orientalism which created the pseudo-scientific biological notion of "Taiyinthar" or "real natives" of #Myanmar caused that country's post-colonial cancer of official & popular genocidal Racism.
This co...
By Alal O Dulal Collective
The Wire
September 24, 2017
As Rohingya people continue to flee Rakhine State and allege widespread persecution, a look at their struggle through the years.
A Rohingya refugee girl collects rain water at a makeshift camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, S...
By Dr Maung Zarni
December 16, 2015
THE #ROHINGYA OR ROHINJAS OF PRE-COLONIAL #MYANMAR
Rohinjas were NOT descendants of colonial era "farm coolies" from East Bengal as Myanmar government blatantly lies to the world.
Based on the 14th century stone inscriptions, Luce described them as ...
By Dr. Habib Siddiqui
Asian Tribune
October 23, 2011
Part 5: The Demography Controversy
According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, the population in Arakan grew to 173,000 in 1831, 248,000 in 1839, 461,136 in 1871 and 762,102 in 1901. For the total population in Arakan to grow ...
By Dr. Habib Siddiqui
Asian Tribune
October 16, 2011
Part 4: Rakhine Attempt to Whitewash Burman King’s Crime
Khin Maung Saw provides a highly distorted rendition of the 1784 invasion of Arakan and tries to justify the brutal occupation by the racist and bigot Burman King Bodaw Paya by s...
By Dr. Habib Siddiqui
Asian Tribune
October 12, 2011
Part 3. The Muslim Factor in Arakan
Just as it happened throughout the coastal territories from the Arabian Peninsula to the Barbary Coast and the shores of Gibraltar and Iberian Peninsula (and beyond) via Alexandria, Tripoli and Tunis to...
(Photo: Soe Zeya Tun, Reuters)
RB News
October 5, 2013
Thandwe, Arakan – Rakhinese mob in Thandwe started attacking Kaman Muslims on September 28, 2013. As a result, 5 Kaman Muslims were mercilessly killed and 1 was died in heart attack while escaping the attack. 781 Kaman Mus...
RB Special Report
July 27, 2013
Maungdaw, Arakan – Tin Maung, a Rakhine from Na-Ta-La village and administrator of U-Daung village tract, Southern Maungdaw Township, Arakan State, was not elected by the people of U-Daung village tract, but rather he was appointed as village administrator b...
RB Report
July 21, 2013
Pahang Rohingya Language School: The first Rohingyalish School in Malaysia
School Theme: “Bring Rohingya Language from tongues to papers”
Project Supervised by: Rohingya Social & Welfare Association Pahang (Newly found organization)
Mohammed Rafique S...
M.S. Anwar
RB Report
October 1, 2012
Since the violence against Rohingyas started, atrocities against Rohingyas have been being carried out in large scale. They have been arrested, tortured and killed. Their women and girls were raped. Their properties were looted, destroyed and torched. In...
Rohingya families arrive at a UNHCR transit centre near the village of Anjuman Para, Cox’s Bazar, south-east Bangladesh after spending four days stranded at the Myanmar border with some 6,800 refugees. (Photo: UNHCR/Roger Arnold)
By UN News
May 11, 2018
Late last year, as violent repressi...
Ten Rohingya Muslim men with their hands bound kneel as members of the Myanmar security forces stand guard in Inn Din village September 2, 2017. REUTERS
By Wa Lone, Kyaw Soe Oo, Simon Lewis, Antoni Slodkowski
Reuters
February 8, 2018
INN DIN, Myanmar -- Bound together, the 1...
In this Friday Nov. 24, 2017, photo, Mohammadul Hassan, 18, is photographed in his family’s tent in Jamtoli refugee camp in Bangladesh. Hassan still bears the scars on his chest and back from being shot by soldiers who attempted to execute him. More than 650,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to Ban...
By Human Rights Watch
December 19, 2017
Hundreds Killed, Raped in Tula Toli
Rangoon – The Burmese army carried out systematic killings and rape of several hundred Rohingya Muslims in Tula Toli village in Rakhine State on August 30, 2017, Human Rights Watch said in a report released...
Nov. 22, 2017, photo, F, 22, who says she was raped by members of Myanmar’s armed forces in June and again in September, cries as she speaks to The Associated Press in her tent in Kutupalong refugee camp in Bangladesh. The Associated Press has found that the rape of Rohingya women by Myanmar’s s...
By Amnesty International
November 21, 2017
The situation for Myanmar’s Rohingya minority has deteriorated dramatically since August 2017, when the military unleashed a brutal campaign of violence against the population living in the northern parts of Rakhine State, where the majority o...
(Photo: Reuters)
Joint Statement: Rohingya Groups Call on U.S. Government to Ensure International Accountability for Myanmar Military-Planned Genocide
December 17, 2018
We, the undersigned Rohingya organizations worldwide, call for accountability for genocide and crimes against...
PRESS RELEASE: ROHINGYA DENIED ACCESS TO EDUCATION IN MYANMAR AND BANGLADESH
13th December 2018
A whole generation of Rohingya children are being denied the opportunity to shape their own future as they face extremely limited access to education in both Myanmar and in refugee c...
PRESS RELEASE
December 5, 2018
PROTECT THE ROHINGYA WINTER SCHOOL (NOVEMBER 2018) COXS BAZAAR, BANGLADESH
This past week members of Protect the Rohingya (PTR) collaborated with members of the Rohingya Community Development Campaign (RCDC) to organise a winter school for 100 Rohingya adu...
Press Release
20, November 2018
Myanmar, not Bangladesh, is responsible for failed repatriation
On behalf of the Rohingya people, we would like to express regret and disgust at Myanmar's policy of continuously blaming Bangladesh for the failure of repatriation of Rohingya refug...
Media Release from Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK
For Immediate Release 10th November 2018
ASEAN leaders must push Myanmar to end Rohingya genocide
Southeast Asian leaders must stop burying their heads in the sand and pressure Myanmar to end the ongoing genocide against Rohingya ...
Media Release from Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK
For Immediate Release 27th September 2018
Creation of UN mechanism a vital step towards justice for the Rohingya genocide
The United Nations Human Rights Council’s (HRC) vote today to create an international and independent mechanis...
RB News
December 6, 2017
Tokyo, Japan -- Legislators from all parties, along with Human Rights Now, Human Rights Watch, and Save the Children, came together to host the emergency parliament in-house event “The Rohingya Human Rights Crisis and Japanese Diplomacy” on December 4th. The eve...
RB News
May 13, 2017
The International Conference on ''Militarism and Democracy '' was held in Tokyo on May 6th and 7th, 2017. The conference was organized by Asia Pacific Research Network (APRN) with the cooperation of other international organizations based in Asia Pacific countries. ...
RB News
March 6, 2017
London: The Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK President Tun Khin was invited to speak about the plight of the Rohingya people at the Socialist International XXV Congress meeting. At the congress meeting, more than 400 members attended from 86 parties, including th...
By Wyston Lawrence
RB Petition
October 15, 2017
There is one petition has been going on Change.org to remove Ven. Wira Thu from Facebook. He has been known as Buddhist Bin Laden. Time magazine published his image on their cover with the title of The Face of Buddhist Terror. The petitio...
Petition started by Nurul Islam, London, United Kingdom
WE PETITION THE DAVID CAMERON ADMINISTRATION TO:
Support justice for the Rohingya at the ICC
Mr. Prime Minister, Rohingya community members have filed a communication with the International Criminal Court petitioning the Prosec...
Petition By RestlessBeings
TAKE ACTION – DEMAND ASEAN COUNTRIES TO FIND SHORT TERM AND LONG TERM SOLUTIONS TO THE ROHINGYA CRISIS
The conditions for the Rohingya stranded at sea off the coasts of Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia are worsening by the hour. The majority of the world’s me...
By United to End Genocide
October 1, 2014
The Rohingya Muslim ethnic minority in Burma have been called “the most oppressed people on Earth”. They continue to suffer vicious attacks and systematic abuse by Burma’s government. Fleeing violence, over 140,000 Rohingya live in what many desc...
we petition the obama administration to:
Mr. President, Don't Backtrack, Step Up and Recognize the Rohingya
In your 2012 trip to Myanmar, you made an extraordinary powerful statement about a highly persecuted ethnic group in Burma, demonstrating your humanity and the American resolve for hum...
RB News
April 19, 2013
Kitchener: The Rohingya Association Canada based in Kitchener, Ontario sent the below letter to Canadian Foreign Minister Hon. John Baird today.
RAC also launched a petition “Hold Burmese government responsible for crimes against humanity”. The signa...
Terrorized, starving and homeless: Myanmar's Rohingya still forgotten
Sittwe, Myanmar (CNN) -- It's been three years since I reported on the plight of the Rohingya Muslim people of western Myanmar and neighboring Bangladesh. We called our documentary "A Forgotten People," and it looked at appalling incidents where boatloads of refugees fleeing poverty and persecution arrived in Thailand only to be towed back out to sea and abandoned by the Thai security forces. Hundreds died or went missing.
Since then, the Rohingya have remained off the political agenda in western countries.
But now that's changing. U.S. President Barack Obama addressed their plight during his recent visit to Yangon. The lukewarm response he got in the auditorium was nothing to the vitriol he got online. Even mentioning the name Rohingya is controversial for some in Myanmar.
We have come to Rahkine
to report on the latest threat to the Rohingya. What we have found is
shocking. The Rohingyas are among the most persecuted people on the
planet. In both Myanmar and Bangladesh -- where they have a deep-rooted
heritage dating back to when it was known as East Bengal -- they are not
officially citizens and are denied passports, access to health-care,
education and decent jobs.
Each country claims the
Rohingya is the other's problem. In July this year, the Bangladeshi
government ordered three international aid organizations to stop helping
Rohingya who were crossing the border from Myanmar.
In Myanmar, their
perilous situation has become markedly worse in recent months. Mobs of
Buddhist Rahkine extremists have been torching whole Rohingya villages. Hundreds have died and more than 100,000 people have been forced to flee, according to humanitarian groups.
But there is nowhere for
them to go. So driven by fear many are congregating in huge makeshift
camps on the edge of the Rahkine town of Sittwe.
I was expecting the
camps to be grim -- but I wasn't prepared to see children starving to
death. This isn't journalistic hyperbole. The two western doctors
working unofficially here have watched several children perish before
their eyes -- not from a rare tropical disease or an untreated chronic
condition, but simply from malnutrition.
I find it sickening and
outrageous that this is happening in a land of plentiful food in 2012.
Perhaps I am naïve or too idealistic. I should probably know better, I
should have seen enough of the world's misery and violence to be
unaffected by a wide-eyed kid too fatigued to swat the flies from her
eyes. But this one broke my heart.
She's not alone.
An assessment in August by Refugees International found that "2,000 acutely malnourished children who were at a high risk of mortality."
Thousands of kids like Saulama Hafu are starving to death.
International aid
agencies are beginning to wake up to the scale of the problem. The
United Nations has just launched an appeal for US$41 million. Tents,
wells and latrines have been installed in some of the camps, but
according to Refugees International,
camp facilities are "unacceptable and fall well below international
standards" and "are a direct manifestation of a funding gap." They say
water and sanitation facilities in particular are "wholly inadequate,
resulting in life-threatening illnesses."
Many Rohingya are
surviving on a cup of rice each day and little else. It's not enough for
breast-feeding mothers to sustain their babies. It's not enough for
adults. It's not enough for little Saulama, whose skeletal body is as
light as a doll's. She looks like a famine victim but she is starving to
death in a camp surrounded by paddy fields full of rice. There's a busy
market a couple of miles away, but her mother is effectively imprisoned
here. This is a man-made crisis that could be ended immediately, with
political will.
I asked Saulama's age,
thinking that she looked like a toddler. My own dand is
considerably larger, so I guess perhaps she was two. I was appalled
when her mother told me Saulama is five-years old. In the west, she'd be
in her first year of school. Here, she could be in the last year of her
life. She's so thin she can barely walk. Her limbs are pitifully
emaciated. After six months in this camp, she looks like she can't go
on.
The doctors have not
been given visas to help here, so they can only get the most basic
supplies. The Myanmar government is reluctant to allow aid workers to
help people who don't officially exist. But the reality is that there
are an estimated one million Rohingya in Western Myanmar and at least a
tenth of them have been driven from their homes.
Yet driving around
Sittwe, away from the camps, you rarely see a Rohingya in the town
center. When we asked a Rohingya driver to bring us back from the camps
to our hotel to sort out a problem with our camera, the hotel manager
was furious. He told us in no uncertain terms not to use a Muslim driver
again and said people had seen the driver come into the hotel and had
complained. It is apartheid of the most extreme form.
Near Sittwe University,
which sits amid several Rohingya villages and camps, RohingyaS on foot,
bicycle or scooter are forced to pull off the road when Buddhist Rakhine
students are leaving classes. Sharing the same stretch of tarmac as a
Rohingya is unacceptable for many Rahkine Buddhists; heaven forbid a
Rohingya should attempt to board the same bus or eat in the same
restaurant.
Aung Mingalar is the
last neighborhood of Rohingya living inside the town of Sittwe; the rest
of population is now under canvas or tarps out in the countryside. This
island of Rohingya houses is now effectively a ghetto surrounded by
barbed wire.
The soldiers that patrol
the area are supposed to protect the Rohingya from further attacks by
hostile locals, but videos taken by Rohingya purportedly showing an
outbreak of violence in Aung Mingalar in June show the troops doing
little to put out fires set in Rohingya homes. The Rohingya fear more
attacks here, but can do little to stop the gangs of extremists who they
say were orchestrated by a local Rahkine nationalist party.
The spokesman for that
party denies involvement, but has open contempt for the Rohingya,
flinching when I even mention the term. He says it's a recently made up
word, and that the Rohingya are simply Bengalis from neighboring
Bangladesh. Ominously he goes further. He doesn't just want to kick all
Rohingya out. He wants all Muslims out of Rakhine state, including
officially recognized ethic groups like the Kaman. The anti-Muslim
sentiment has spread across Myanmar, with protests outside a mosque in
the main city of Yangon.
The International Crisis Group report on the situation is deeply worrying, while Human Rights Watch has also completed some important work, highlighting the atrocities, with satellite photos showing the vast areas of destruction.
What has disappointed
many is that Nobel laureate and pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi
took a long time to speak out clearly to uphold Rohingya rights and
condemn the extremists. She recently told Indian Broadcaster NTV:
"Violence is something I condemn completely, but don't forget that
violence has been committed by both sides. This is why I prefer not to
take sides and also I want to work towards reconciliation between these
two communities. I'm not going to be able to do that if I'm going to
take sides."
Suu Kyi elaborated
further, saying: "There's a quarrel whether people are true citizens
under the law or whether they have come over as migrants later from
Bangladesh. One of the very interesting and rather disturbing facts of
this whole problem is that most people seem to think as that there was
only one country involved in this border issue. But there are two
countries. There's Bangladesh one side, there's Burma on the other and
the security and the security of the border is surely the responsibility
of both countries."
But in the past she has
referred to Rohingyas with the pejorative term "Bengalis" suggesting
some should not be recognized as citizens in Myanmar.
The whole issue has
tarnished the glow of fast-paced reform in Myanmar. While the rest of
the country is enjoying freedoms not experienced in 60 years of military
dictatorship, in Rahkine State the ethnic cleansing is continuing with
impunity. It demands the attention of the international community, for
the sake of children like Saulama... before it's too late.