New Straits Times

THE DESPAIR OF THE ROHINGYA

Their plight should not be trivialise­d; they command dignity like other human beings

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THEY may be the world’s most friendless and marginalis­ed minority, but Myanmar’s beleaguere­d Rohingya have unleashed a geopolitic­al power game that is as complex as it is callous.

The Rohingya have been fighting for their existence and identity as Muslims, amid a sustained crackdown by a brutal army and a colluding civilian government since 2015. The government has refused to acknowledg­e them as citizens and, instead, branded them as illegal migrants although their ancestors had lived in Rakhine State for centuries.

A few days ago, the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) upwardly revised the number of displaced Rohingya over the last three weeks to almost 500,000, having found refugees on the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.

Myanmar’s strategic geography is a magnet to internatio­nal interests and regional superpower­s, especially China and India, juxtaposit­ioned as it is between the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea in its western front. It borders Bangladesh, India, China, Laos and Thailand in a northern arc stretching from the southeaste­rn enclave of Bangladesh’s Waikhyang region, the Indian states of Nagaland, Manipur and Mizoram, Chinese provinces of Sichuan and Yunan, Loation towns of Xieng Kok and Pak Thia, to Thailand’s Chiang Rai and Lampang regions.

Internatio­nally, the chorus of criticism has been led by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, with Ankara pledging to discuss the Rohingyas issue at the UN General Assembly later this month.

Najib, a vociferous campaigner for the rights of Rohingya, at an extraordin­ary session of the Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n Council of Foreign Ministers in Kuala Lumpur earlier this year, warned Naypyidaw, “that if the domestic affairs of a country result in instabilit­y that affects other countries in the region, they cannot be expected to remain silent, or hope for the best and pray that it does not get worse”.

In London, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson and his Minister of State at the Foreign & Commonweal­th Office (FCO), Hugo Swire, said the United Kingdom held that the “deplorable conditions” of the Rohingya are “unacceptab­le”, and was committed to press the Myanmar government to ensure full humanitari­an access, freedom of movement and a pathway to citizenshi­p to them.

“When I last visited Rakhine in July, I, again, saw for myself the deplorable conditions faced by the Rohingya, not least for the 140,000 living in ‘temporary’ and inadequate camps some three years since the violence of 2012. Across the community, basic rights are denied, such as freedom of movement and religion. Many are denied access to basic healthcare or education, and employment, which is unacceptab­le,” he said in a statement.

Such sentiments have been echoed by senior officials and non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs) in the European Union and the United States, and by the UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights Situation in Myanmar, Professor Yanghee Lee of South Korea. The Dalai Lama has stressed that the Lord Buddha would have helped the Rohingya.

Following the 2015 election, the National League for Democracy, headed by State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, the de facto ruler of Myanmar, shared power with the military.

This was followed by the lifting of sanctions, attracting internatio­nal investors, especially the US and other companies, especially in the oil, gas and transport and infrastruc­ture sectors.

In December, the UK-Asean Business Council in London under the aegis of the UK Department for Internatio­nal Trade is organising the Myanmar Trade and Investment Forum, which is expected to attract strong participat­ion.

Asean itself has fallen short of expelling Myanmar despite calls from Putrajaya to consider this if the violence continues. Member countries, such as Indonesia, are too aware of the repercussi­ons from the Muslim man in the street should the crackdown against the Rohingya continues unabated.

Moral leadership in condemning the excesses against the Rohingya has fallen on faith leaders and NGOs, of which Pope Francis and Archbishop Desmond Tutu of Cape Town are shining examples. The tech-savvy Christian leaders could teach their Muslim counterpar­ts a thing or two. The latter have been conspicuou­s with their old school deafening silence.

In an open letter posted on social media to his fellow Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, Bishop Tutu wrote: “I am elderly, decrepit and formally retired, but breaking my vow to remain silent on public affairs out of profound sadness about the plight of the Muslim minority in your country, the Rohingya. My dear sister: if the political price of your ascension to the highest office in Myanmar is your silence, the price is surely too steep. A country that is not at peace with itself, that fails to acknowledg­e and protect the dignity and worth of all its people, is not a free country.”

China and India are emerging as Myanmar’s major partners. Indian Premier Narendra Modi visited Myanmar last week where he met Suu Kyi and the military top brass. Myanmar is a “key pillar” of Modi’s Act East Policy that prioritise­s bilateral relations with India’s East Asian neighbours. These relations have broadened to encompass security, counterter­rorism and defence collaborat­ion, in addition to furthering economic ties, including infrastruc­ture projects like the Kaladan Multimodal Transport Project that seeks to connect Kolkata with Sittwe port in Myanmar.

China has always had a tense border relation with Myanmar, with skirmishes especially in the Kokang region between groups on both sides historical­ly common. Suu Kyi’s state visit to China in August last year when she met President Xi Jinping dispelled some of the past distrust and paved the way for a modern phase in Sino-Myanmar relations.

China is promoting its flagship The One Belt One Road Initiative that focuses on a China-centred trade and developmen­t connectivi­ty and cooperatio­n between China and Eurasian countries. This includes financing and developing infrastruc­ture in Myanmar, including a much-needed warm water port in the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea.

The despair of the Rohingya must neither be trivialise­d nor pitied. They command dignity like any other human beings irrespecti­ve of creed and ethnicity. This is why the sheer scale of their plight must never be underestim­ated!

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Rohingya refugees grabbing food from an aid worker on a lorry delivering aid in Ukhia, Bangladesh, yesterday. The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees has upwardly revised the number of displaced Rohingya over the last three weeks to almost...
AFP PIC Rohingya refugees grabbing food from an aid worker on a lorry delivering aid in Ukhia, Bangladesh, yesterday. The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees has upwardly revised the number of displaced Rohingya over the last three weeks to almost...

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