The Phnom Penh Post

Myanmar halts workers to Malaysia as crisis grows

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MYANMAR has stopped sending workers to Muslim-majority Malaysia as relations sour over a bloody military crackdown on the Buddhist country’s Rohingya minority.

The move came after Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak lashed out at Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi for allowing “genocide”, during a rally in Kuala Lumpur that drew thousands of people. The crowds were protesting against a military crackdown in Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine that has pushed more than 20,000 Rohingya Muslims into Bangladesh.

Survivors have told horrifying stories of gang rape, torture and murder at the by Myanmars security forces, while doz- ens have died trying to cross the river that separates the two countries.

Buddhist-majority Myanmar has long discrimina­ted against the stateless Rohingya and the recent crisis has galvanised protests in Muslim countries around the region, including Malaysia.

“We want to tell Aung San Suu Kyi, enough is enough . . . We must and we will defend Muslims and Islam,” Najib said at Sunday’s 5,000-strong rally. “The world cannot sit and watch genocide taking place.”

A Malaysian government minister has also called for a review of Myanmar’s membership of the ASEAN bloc.

Myanmar officials have denied the allegation­s of abuse and Suu Kyi has told the internatio­nal community to stop stoking the “fires of resentment”.

Late onTuesday Myanmar’s Immigratio­n Ministry said it had stopped issuing new licences for its nationals to work in wealthier Malaysia, for years a top destinatio­n for migrant labour.

“Myanmar has temporaril­y stopped sending workers to Malaysia from 6/12/2016 because of the current situation in Malaysia,” it said in a statement.

Myanmar has also summoned Malaysia’s ambassador to protest at Najib’s accusation­s of ethnic cleansing.

“Such irresponsi­ble remarks could worsen the already deepening polarisati­on between the two communitie­s and violent extremism,” Myanmar’s Foreign Ministry said on yesterday.

Malaysia already hosts tens of thousands of Myanmar workers, most of them in low-paid jobs in factories or the food and hospitalit­y industries. According to Malaysia, some 56,000 Rohingya have arrived on its shores in recent years, many taking perilous boat journeys to flee poverty and discrimina­tion in Rakhine.

But on Tuesday former UN chief Kofi Annan, who heads a commission on troubled Rakhine, told reporters he thought the crisis would not split the region apart. “I think it can be contained. There is a possibilit­y here to contain what is going on,” he said at the end of a week-long visit.

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