Jakarta Globe, November
08, 2012
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Yangon.
Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has urged the government to send more troops
to western Myanmar to restore peace to a region convulsed by communal violence
between Buddhists and Muslims.
The Nobel
laureate, who has been criticized for failing specifically to condemn the
treatment of Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims, called for an end to the unrest in
Rakhine state that has left at least 180 people dead and 110,000 displaced
since June.
"Everyone
is responsible for respecting human rights, without discriminating between
majority and minority, ethnicity and religion," she said in a statement
released with lawmakers from ethnic minority parties on Wednesday.
The
democracy champion said more security forces must be sent to bring "peace,
stability and the rule of law" to Rakhine, where renewed conflict last
month involving ethnic Rakhine and Muslims, mainly the Rohingya, killed scores.
The
statement followed a meeting of the parliamentary committee on the Rule of Law
and Stability, which Suu Kyi chairs.
It did not
mention the Rohingya by name but it directly addressed the "concerns"
of ethnic Rakhine.
The unrest
pivots on the Rohingya's lack of legal status in Myanmar, where they are seen
by the government and many Burmese as illegal immigrants from neighboring
Bangladesh.
In rare
comments touching on the incendiary topic, Suu Kyi said the government must
"inform the public clearly how it will handle the citizenship issue."
A 1982 law
enshrines the citizenship of Myanmar's officially-recognized ethnic groups but
the Rohingya were excluded, despite their claims to have met the criteria by
having ancestors in the country some 160 years before.
With around
800,000 stateless Rohingya in Rakhine, the reformist government is under
international pressure to give them a legal status, with warnings that the
conflict threatens its democratic transition.
Acknowledging
the "very profound and sensitive" nature of the unrest, Suu Kyi also
said the issue "is not the responsibility of a single country," in
comments likely to refer to Bangladesh.
The
Rohingya are considered by the United Nations to be one of the most persecuted
minorities on the planet.
Tens of
thousands languish in squalid makeshift camps across Rakhine state after their
homes were torched, while many others have tried to flee the restive region in
rickety boats.
Bangladeshi
rescuers on Thursday searched for 50 people missing after a boat carrying
Rohingya heading for Malaysia capsized.

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