Jakarta Globe, October 27, 2012
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| Myanmar's 800,000 Rohingya are seen as illegal immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh. (AFP Photo) |
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Bangkok.
Decades of discrimination have left the Muslim Rohingya stateless, scattered
around the globe and viewed by the United Nations as among the most persecuted
minorities on the planet.
About
800,000 Rohingya live in Myanmar, according to the UN, mostly in western
Rakhine state, which has been hit by fierce communal violence since June that
has left about 150 dead and caused tens of thousands to flee their homes.
Confined
mainly to three districts — Maungdaw, Buthidaung and Rathedaung — they have
long been treated as "foreign" by the government and many Burmese, a
situation that activists say has led to a deepening alienation from Rakhine's
Buddhists.
Images of
squalid camps and reports of perilous attempts to flee to other countries in
rickety boats have drawn international attention to their plight in recent
years, but living conditions have scarcely improved.
Forced
labour, restrictions on freedom of movement, lack of land rights, education and
public services were listed as among the limitations placed on the group, the
United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) said in a report published in December
last year.
"The
Rohingya are virtually friendless amongst Myanmar's other ethnic, linguistic
and religious communities," the UNHCR report said.
Speaking a
dialect similar to that spoken in Chittagong in southeast Bangladesh, the Sunni
Muslims are viewed with hostility by many in Rakhine state, who view them as
illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and refer to them as "Bengali".
That
animosity extends outside the state and even includes key figures in the
democratic movement, long supported by the international community, which has
warned the unrest and displacements pose a threat to Myanmar's reforms.
There have
also been a series of recent anti-Muslim protests by Buddhists in the country,
sometimes led by monks, amid perceptions of a threat to the majority Buddhist
religion and fears over Islamic extremism — accusations the Rohingya strongly
deny.
Neighboring
Bangladesh - where the UN estimates there are at least 230,000 Rohingya - sees
the group as a burden on its strained finances and the refugees are blamed for
all sorts of crimes in the southeast of the country ranging from petty theft to
drug trafficking.
Bangladesh,
which has mobilized extra patrols along its river border in response to the
latest violence, drew UN criticism after it turned back boatloads of Rohingya,
mainly women and children, after June's unrest.
Two massive
waves of refugees, of approximately 250,000 people each, flooded across the
border into Bangladesh in 1978 and 1991-92. Large scale repatriations ensued,
with the UN questioning the "voluntary" nature of the measure.
In recent
years, other Rohingya migrants have undertaken the dangerous voyage by boat
towards Malaysia or Thailand, whose navy was has in the past been accused of
towing them back out to sea.
Hundreds of
thousands of Rohingya are now thought to live outside Myanmar, including
communities in Pakistan and around 400,000 in Gulf states, according to the
UNHCR report.
Many are
also now fleeing to Malaysia, where the UN says around 24,000 are registered.
Rights groups say there may be thousands living unregistered in the country.
Myanmar has
a multitude of ethnic groups, many of whom have conducted sporadic armed
rebellions since independence from Britain in 1948.
But the
Rohingya are not officially recognized, partly owing to a 1982 law stipulating
that minorities must prove they lived in Myanmar prior to 1823 - before the
first Anglo-Burmese war - to obtain nationality.
Representatives
of the Rohingya say their people were in Myanmar long before then, but while
there have been suggestions that citizenship could be granted to those with a
long-standing link to the country, judging proof of a Myanmar heritage could
pose an intractable challenge for authorities.
Agence France-Presse


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