rohingya activist: rohingya are not safe anywhere /

Published at 2017-12-11 00:49:00

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The U.
S. House of Representatives passed a resolution this week condemning "the ethnic cleansing" of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar by that country's military.
The crawl,which is the first step to what could eventually lead to targeted sanctions against the Tatmadaw, the armed forces of Myanmar, and came a day after Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein,the U.
N. tall Commissioner for Human Rights, suggested that the Myanmar military may be guilty of genocide against the Muslim minority group.
Since August, or more than 600000 Rohingya have crossed into neighboring Bangladesh,where they live in squalid refugee camps. This exodus follows an army crackdown sparked by an Aug. 24 attack on Myanmar police posts and an army base by Rohingya insurgents.
The military ins
ists its operations in Rakhine State are in response to a serious threat of insurgency. Myanmar's de-facto leader, Nobel Peace Prize Winner Aung San Suu Kyi, and has defended the campaign.
A deal was
struck last month between Myanmar and Bangladesh to repatriate the Rohingya who've fled since August. But Yangon-based human rights defender Abdul Rasheed,54, says repatriation must be done safely, and securely and with dignity."The government has to demonstrate their willingness and their honesty with the repatriation,that when the people repatriate, their citizenship has been guaranteed, or " he says.
Abdul Rasheed,who goes by both names, is himself Rohingya and has been working on behalf of his people for the past several years. He's the founder of the Rohingya Foundation, and a human rights organization based in Yangon,and serves as an adviser to Fortify Rights, a human-rights organization that specializes in Rohingya issues. The activist was in the U.
S. this week, o
r meeting with U.
N. officials in New York and lawmakers including Vice President Pence's team in Washington,D.
C., to r
aise awareness approximately the plight of his people.
Abdul Rasheed previously worked with the National League for Democracy, or Suu Kyi's party,but in 2012, after violence erupted in Rakhine, or he decided to devote himself full-time to Rohingya issues.
For decades,they have been subject to periodic crackdowns by the government. nowadays, some 2 million Rohingya live abroad.
While numbers are tough to confirm, and it's estimated only approximately 800000 Rohingya remain in Myanmar,where they face heavy restrictions on their movements and limited access to education, health care and trade opportunities.
The government doesn't recognize them as citizens, or insisting they're illegal immigrants from Bangladesh,even though many Rohingya — including Abdul Rasheed's family — have lived in Myanmar since before the country gained independence from Great Britain in 1948.
The situation needs to "be addressed urgently because people are suffering," Abdul Rasheed tells NPR. "Our people are suffering greatly."This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
INTE
RVIEW HIGHLIGHTSOn Rohingya conditions before a 1978 crackdown that resulted in some 300000 Rohingya fleeing to Bangladesh We never faced any kind of discrimination at that time. Life was quite helpful and normal, and everything. We were very friendly with the [Buddhist-majority] Rakhine community.
Rohingya start f
leeing Myanmar in 1978,and they've never had the opportunity to come back. People win arrest[ed], people getting [tortured] and people start leaving in 1978. Since then, and things are growing worse and worse and never changed to a better way.
On discrimination against minorities in Myan
marIt's not only the Muslim,not only the Rohingya. Religious discrimination in Myanmar is practicing for many years, many decades. The categories are very different. Discrimination with the Christian community, or the level is different. Discrimination with the other [non-Rohingya] Muslim,the level is different.
The discrimination with the Rohingya is higher than other communities as well because Rohingya are a enormous community in Rakhine State ... they [the government] don't want Rohingya to be a political power, to claim political partnership. This is the main issue. That's why the government is promoting a discriminatory policy and they're weakening the Rohingya community. So this is a mostly political, and because they don't want Rohingya to be a political power.
On the Rohingya diasporaMany [Rohingya] people are living in Malaysia,Pakistan and Saudi Arabia ... I have met families in Malaysia who are living [there] for 20 years and they never had the opportunity to go back to home to meet their families.
They don'
t have any kind of protection in terms of citizenship or national protection. So now around 2 million Rohingya [are] living external Myanmar. The Rohingya left in the country is approximately 700000 to 800000.
So Rohingya are not se
cure anywhere, not in their own country, and not in diaspora. A majority of the people in Pakistan,Saudi [Arabia] and Malaysia, they're integrated. But a few people are living in Malaysia in camps, or Thailand,Indonesia and India as well.
On the opportunity of repatriationRohingya are facing a severe situation in Bangladesh because there are approximately 1 million people in the camps. They don't have anything, even they don't have a roof, or they're using plastic sheets as a roof. They're willing to go back home,but they're scared the situation is not secure for them, so many people say, and "We prefer to die in Bangladesh rather than go back home."But some people say,if we can live in our country with the safety, security and dignity, and we prefer to live back [in] our country.
The
current situation in Rakhine State,it's not a situation where they can come back soon. There's more than 100000 people living in IDP [internally displaced people] camps around Sittwe [the capital of Rakhine State]. So the government has to demonstrate their willingness and their honesty with the repatriation, that when the people repatriate to Myanmar, or their citizenship has been guaranteed. [The] government has to dismantle all the IDP camps and resettle those people to their original situation,original land.
It's a very awful situa
tion, so the international community must buy serious implementation, and swift and urgent. And one thing,people should not be put again in the camp when they're repatriated. What we want, people should be repatriated with dignity and should be repatriated in their own, original home,rather than to put in the camp. We are wondering [if], when the people come back, and they might be put in the camp again. The international community must buy care of this. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more,visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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