Hanna Hindstrom Monks who played a vital role in Burma’s recent struggle
for democracy have been accused of fuelling ethnic tensions in the
country by calling on people to shun a Muslim community that has
suffered decades of abuse. In a move that has shocked many observers,
some monks’ organisations have issued pamphlets telling people not to
associate with the Rohingya community, and have blocked humanitarian
assistance from reaching them. One leaflet described the Rohingya as
“cruel by nature” and claimed it had “plans to exterminate” other ethnic
groups.The outburst against the Rohingya, often described as one of the
world’s most oppressed groups, comes after weeks of ethnic violence in
the Rakhine state in the west of Burma that has left more than 80 dead
and up to 100,000 people living in a situation described as “desperate”
by humanitarian organisations. As state-sanctioned abuses against the
Muslim community continue, Burma’s president Thein Sein – credited by
the international community for ushering in a series of democratic
reforms in the country and releasing political prisoners such as Aung
San Suu Kyi – has urged neighbouring Bangladesh to take in the
Rohingya.“In recent days, monks have emerged in a leading role to
enforce denial of humanitarian assistance to Muslims, in support of
policy statements by politicians,” said Chris Lewa, director of the
Arakan project, a regional NGO. “A member of a humanitarian agency in
Sittwe told me that some monks were posted near Muslim displacement
camps, checking on and turning away people they suspected would visit
for assistance.”The Young Monks’ Association of Sittwe and Mrauk Oo
Monks’ Association have both released statements in recent days urging
locals not to associate with the group. Displaced Rohingya have been
housed in over-crowded camps away from the Rakhine population – where a
health and malnutrition crisis is said to be escalating – as political
leaders move to segregate and expel the 800,000-strong minority from
Burma. Earlier this month, Thein Sein attempted to hand over the group
to the UN refugee agency.Aid workers report ongoing threats and
interference by local nationalist and religious groups. Some monasteries
in Maungdaw and Sittwe sheltering displaced Rakhine people have openly
refused to accept international aid, alleging that it is “biased” in
favour of the Rohingya. Monks have traditionally played a critical role
in helping vulnerable citizens, stepping in to care for the victims of
Cyclone Nargis in 2008 after the military junta rejected international
assistance.Many have been shocked by the response of the monks and
members of the democracy movement to the recent violence, which erupted
after the rape and murder of a Buddhist woman, allegedly by three
Muslims, unleashed long-standing ethnic tensions.Monks’ leader Ashin
Htawara recently encouraged the government to send the group “back to
their native land” at an event in London hosted by the anti-Rohingya
Burma Democratic Concern. Ko Ko Gyi, a democracy activist with the 88
Generation Students group and a former political prisoner, said: “The
Rohingya are not a Burmese ethnic group. The root cause of the violence…
comes from across the border.” Mark Farmaner, director of Burma
Campaign UK, said: “We were shocked to have [Ashin Htawara] propose to
us that there should be what amounts to concentration camps for the
Rohingya.” Suu Kyi has also been criticised for failing to speak
out. The Rohingya have lived in Burma for centuries, but in 1982, the
then military ruler Ne Win stripped them of their citizenship. Thousands
fled to Bangladesh where they live in pitiful camps. Foreign media are
still denied access to the conflict region, where a state of emergency
was declared last month, and ten aid workers were arrested without
explanation.
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