Skip to main content

Homeless in Burma

Even as the world watches the reforms shaping Burma, violence against Rohingya Muslims in last month’s ethnic clashes in Rakhine province once again brought the focus back on the troubled relationship between the ethnic minority and the Burmese state. The Burmese government has been in the process of normalising its ties with various troubled ethnic minorities in the country, but the Rohingya community remains at loggerheads with the Rakhine Buddhist community. The Thein Sein government, in fact, had to declare martial law in many districts of Rakhine to quell the clashes in which nine Rohingya Muslims were killed.
This is one of the more protracted conflicts affecting the Burmese ethnic mosaic, which has 135 communities. The Rakhine province is home to both the Rakhine Buddhist community and the Rohingya Muslims. The Rohingya community claims to be the original settlers of the Rakhine (or Arakan) province, whose ancestry is traced to Arab traders. It is believed that these Muslim settlers have been in the region since the 8th century, but were a minority within a largely Buddhist Burma. Despite this, the Rohingya Muslims were part of the Burmese state with citizenship rights under colonial rule and in the early post-independence period.
Their rights as citizens were lost only in 1982 when the dominant Burmese ethnic community was identified as those who could establish their ancestry as going back to 1823. The ethnic communities such as the Karens and Kachins were considered minority communities within the Burmese nation. But Rohingyas lost their right to citizenship and also lost access to education and freedom of movement even within the country. There is a view that they lost their citizenship because of the “Muslim phobia” of the junta under Gen. Ne Win.
It is after 1982 that they lost their rights. Under the Citizen Act of 1982 those who could establish their ancestry were given three categories of citizenship, in various degrees — like associate citizenship, normal citizenship etc — but the Rohingyas were just removed from the indigenous ethnic nationalities list.
This affected nearly two million Rohingyas who were forced to migrate to other countries to escape persecution in Burma. Today nearly 800,000 of the community live within Burma, while several have moved to neighbouring countries such as Bangladesh, Thailand, Malaysia and even to India and Pakistan. In fact nearly 50 countries across the world have received Rohingya refugees.
The largest homeless ethnic group in the world, their status has not been fully recognised by international bodies like the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, which has registered only about 50,000 officially with legal and refugee rights.
Last month’s riots in Burma revealed that there is little space for negotiation between the Burmese government and the Rohingya protesters, as the plight of the community is barely understood even in their own country. The latest onslaught occurred when a Rohingya community member was allegedly held responsible for the rape and murder of a Rakhine Buddhist girl. This triggered the most vocal protests from the Rohingyas, including against the use of a derogatory racial word — “kala” — which is often used to refer to people from neighbouring countries who are darker in complexion and have migrated to Burma.
In April 2011, the ethnic community’s attempts to escape in makeshift boats in search of a new home earned them the title of “the new boat people” — a reference to the Nineties when refugees fleeing their country would use rickety boats as a mode of transport on high seas, often leading to the boats capsizing and their deaths by drowning. The Rohingya problem has been festering since then without a viable political mechanism to address it.
Within Burma there is very little political initiative in this direction. Several political leaders, including Aung San Suu Kyi, have said that the current citizenship law should be implemented.
While Burma is going through a phase of reform since the 2010 elections, the Thein Sein government will make great headway if the issue of the Rohingyas is addressed at the earliest. However, the degree to which the Rohingyas are resented within Burma may not allow for any solution in the immediate future.
The Asean Summit last year failed to have any impact on the plight of the Rohingyas. In fact in 2009 Asean shifted the onus of addressing the Rohingya problem to the Bali process, which was an initiative started in 2002 to deal with human trafficking and people smuggling. This Bali process had 50 member countries to assist in framing mechanisms for addressing such crimes. However, since it deals with trafficking it was not equipped to address the problems of Rohingya refugees.
Even as the reform process shapes Burma and its integration into the international community, turning a blind eye to the Rohingya problem is going to leave a festering wound for the future.
The writer is an associate professor of Southeast Asian Studies at the School of International Studies, JNU
Source here

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থীদের কোনো ভবিষ্যৎ নেই

বাংলাদেশের আশ্রয়শিবিরে বসবাসকারী রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থীদের কোনোই ভবিষ্যৎ নেই বলে মন্তব্য করেছেন রোহিঙ্গা বিষয়ক আইনজীবী রাজিয়া সুলতানা। তিনি এই আশ্রয়শিবিরকে চিড়িয়াখানার সঙ্গে তুলনা করেছেন এবং রোহিঙ্গাদের ফেরত পাঠানোর জন্য একটি উপযুক্ত কৌশল নির্ধারণের আহ্বান জানিয়েছেন। কয়েকদিন আগে যুক্তরাষ্ট্রের পররাষ্ট্র মন্ত্রণালয়ের ইন্টারন্যাশনাল ওমেন অব কারেজ এওয়ার্ড (আইডব্লিউসিএ) পুরস্কার পান রাজিয়া সুলতানা। সাহসিকতা দেখানোর জন্য সারা বিশ্ব থেকে বাছাই করা ১০ জন নারীকে এ পুরস্কার দেয়া হয়।  রাজিয়া সুলতানার একটি সাক্ষাৎকার নিয়েছে বার্তা সংস্থা রয়টার্স। তাতে তিনি রোহিঙ্গাদের পরিণতি নিয়ে হতাশা প্রকাশ করেন। রাজিয়া সুলতানা বলেন, মিয়ানমারের মুসলিম সংখ্যালঘু সম্প্রদায়ের রোহিঙ্গা শরণার্থীদের মধ্যে আশার অভাব রয়েছে। ২০১৭ সালের আগস্টে মিয়ানমারের সেনাবাহিনীর নৃশংস নির্যাতনের ফলে তারা পালিয়ে এসে বাংলাদেশে আশ্রয় নিতে বাধ্য হয়। রাজিয়া সুলতানা বলেন, এই আশ্রয় শিবিরে যত বেশি সময় শরণার্থীরা থাকবেন ততই পরিস্থিতির অবনতি ঘটতে থাকবে। ওই সাক্ষাৎকারে তিনি আরো বলেন, হ্যাঁ, এ কথা সত্য যে, শরণার্থীরা খাবার পাচ্ছে। কিন...

Burma camp for Rohingyas 'dire' - Valerie Amos

Muslim Rohingya people in Mayebon Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp in Mayebon township in the western Myanmar Rakhine state on November 1, 2012 The UN's top humanitarian official has said conditions for displaced Burmese Muslim Rohingyas are "dire", and called on Burma to improve them. Valerie Amos made the comments after visiting camps in Rakhine state. More than 135,000 people displaced during six months of ethnic conflict are living in camps in the state, the vast majority of them Rohingyas.

One of the world’s most vulnerable groups now finds itself confronting covid-19

By  Christian Caryl   Op-ed Editor/International The coronavirus has unleashed  so many problems around the world  that it’s almost impossible to keep track of them all. Even so, it’s worth taking a moment to consider the situation facing one of the planet’s most vulnerable groups. They’ve been persecuted, maligned and terrorized — and now  they’re preparing to confront the virus  with minimal protection. In the summer and fall of 2017, the Myanmar military launched  a campaign of terror  against the ethnic group known as the Rohingya, driving some 700,000 of them across the border into neighboring Bangladesh. Myanmar’s predominantly Buddhist ruling elite has long discriminated against the Muslim Rohingya, treating them as a nefarious alien presence in the country’s midst even though most have lived there for generations. Periodic waves of persecution had already sent many Rohingya fleeing across the border in the decades before the  2017 atr...