Kuwait Times

Myanmar Rohingya calendar men jailed on new charges

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YANGON: Five Myanmar men fined for publishing a calendar that described the country’s persecuted Muslim Rohingya as a recognized ethnic minority have been rearrested and jailed on fresh charges, police said yesterday. The men were initially taken into custody over the weekend in Yangon and fined $800 each on Monday after pleading guilty to a publishing law offence. But they have now been rearrested and jailed on separate charges of inciting alarm or panic, a charge that carries up to two years jail.

“We arrested five persons yesterday under the warrant by the court. They were sent to Insein prison,” Khin Maung Latt, police chief of Pazundaung township, told AFP, referring to the city’s notorious junta era prison. Local media reported that the calendar, which initially appeared on Facebook, quoted former officials from the 1950s and 1960s as saying Myanmar’s Rohingya were a distinct ethnic group. It also contained quotes from Myanmar’s liberation hero Aung San in 1946 saying Muslims and Buddhists should live in peace with each other.

Myanmar’s government does not recognize the term Rohingya, arguing that the Muslim minority are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, despite the fact that many have lived in the country for generation­s. Use of the term has become both sensitive and dangerous in recent years as Myanmar undergoes a surge of Buddhist nationalis­m and anti-Muslim sentiment.

The United Nations and other rights groups have condemned the treatment of the Rohingya in western Rakhine state where they face restrictio­ns over employment and travel with many living in bleak displaceme­nt camps. Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya were also unable to vote in this month’s landmark elections after they were struck off voter lists. Local media reported that the arrests of the men came after hardline Buddhist nationalis­t group Ma Ba Tha complained about the calendar.

 ??  ?? NEW DELHI: Sikhs throng the Gurudwara Bangla Sahib on the birth anniversar­y of their first guru, Guru Nanak, in New Delhi yesterday. Sikhism was founded in the 15th century by Guru Nanak, who preached the equality of races and genders, and the...
NEW DELHI: Sikhs throng the Gurudwara Bangla Sahib on the birth anniversar­y of their first guru, Guru Nanak, in New Delhi yesterday. Sikhism was founded in the 15th century by Guru Nanak, who preached the equality of races and genders, and the...

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