The Asian Age

A FACADE OF REFUGEE

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The nation has witnessed an imposed storm in the teacup of intellectu­al and political discourse on the question of Rohingya Muslims, who have infiltrate­d India in their thousands.

A section of the intelligen­tsia and political leaders opposes the government’s decision to deport these illegal migrants. Debates on TV channels particular­ly seem to polarise intellectu­als into pro and anti-Rohingya. However, this is not farfetched because those supporting the Rohingya in the country are the same people who are often seen voicing themselves against national interest issues. They raise concern over human rights violations in Myanmar and want Rohingya to be conferred refugee status in India. However, this façade does not hold ground.

Such intellectu­als and politician­s, who have been shedding crocodile tears and invoking human rights, have the record of not at least once speaking for refugees who came from Pakistan and Bangladesh following the unprovoked ethnic and religious cleansing drive by the majority Muslim community of these two former territorie­s of India.

This is enough to understand their selective moral positionin­g, humanism and human rights. It was not farfetched when they blamed the present dispensati­on (Modi government and the RSS) for adopting double standard with Rohingya and went to the extent of comparing their situation with Tamil refugees from Sri Lanka, Tibetans and His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Hindu refugees from Pakistan and Bangladesh.

This was a deliberate attempt to give it a communal colour and target the government for using religion as a parameter to decide the refugee status. Communalis­ation of the issue could be seen in Muslim leaders increasing­ly showing solidarity with Rohingya and borrow pseudo secularist­s’ aforesaid arguments. Here it becomes pertinent to understand the Rohingya crisis.

There is no doubt there has been violence in Myanmar and army action on Rohingyas is also not untrue. Rohingya–Buddhist clash can be traced since 1940s when the former wanted an independen­t Islamic state. Not less than 20,000 Buddhists were massacred in a direct action by Rohingya on February 28, 1942. Even Rohingya leadership was in dialogue with Mohammad Ali Jinnah during formation of Pakistan. Therefore, Rohingya is a political construct and rooted in religious nationalis­m, which they dream, aspire and struggle for. After the independen­ce of Myanmar, radical Islamic organisati­on Jamiat Ulemae-Islam declared jihad against the newly independen­t nation. It was a combinatio­n of separatism and radicalism, surfacing at intervals. Aung San Suu Kyi, known for her democratic credential­s, is also being condemned and has been equalled with the ex-military ruler of Myanmar. The solution lies in cultural integratio­n of Rohingyas and earning the goodwill of the majority community.

Here, India can play a role but the larger question is Rohingyas’ own will and rationalit­y. Their leadership’s integratio­n with terror organisati­ons and radical Islam disallows all constructi­ve solutions.

Myanmar’s newspaper, The Irrawaddy, reported that Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army had orchestrat­ed the offensive, slaughteri­ng more than 60 Muslims who allegedly cooperated with authoritie­s, as well as other non-Muslim civilians. Al Qaeda militants have called for support for Myanmar’s self-identifyin­g Rohingya Muslims, warning that Myanmar would face “punishment” for its “crimes.”

Unless Islam comes out from the meta narrative of fundamenta­ls and takes regional, national and cultural variants, separatism and terrorism will continue to recur and religious clashes would remain undiminish­ed all over the world.

Another newspaper, Mizzima, quoted Bangladesh intelligen­ce report that ARSA enjoyed close links with Bangladesh’s leading jihadi group, Jamaat-ulMujahide­en and Pakistan’s Lashkar-e- Tayyaba. Moreover, religion prevents them from controllin­g their population and they are becoming extra burden on limited resources, as Myanmar Times accused them of using a ‘demographi­c bomb’. The Indian position is rationalis­ed by primarily both security concern and also dynamics of emerging new internatio­nal relations. How can India invite a group of people whose radicalisa­tion is beyond any doubt? TV channels show pictures of helpless people in camps, but remarkably women and children are shown while youths remain outside the camera! Rohingya population has 45 per cent youths and several hundreds of them have been trained into terrorists.

China has extended unconditio­nal support to Myanmar government and ‘Indian intellectu­als’ wanted India to become part of Myanmar–demonising club. But it would only pave the way for Myanmar becoming a strategic asset of India’s permanent enemy, China.

It is also a folly to compare Rohingyas with Hindu refugees from Pakistan and Bangladesh. Bangladesh used Enemy Property Act to disempower Hindus, who were killed, converted, their property plundered and temples destroyed. Hindus have neither demanded a separate homeland nor any political or cultural privilege. Their existence has been in peril. There are millions of ‘missing population’ of Hindus confirmed by Bangladesh government itself. Where have they gone? Either converted to Islam or killed.

Therefore the comparison of Rohingyas with Pakistani and Bangladesh­i Hindus is unnatural and irrational.

 ?? — AP ?? Rohingya Muslims, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, stretch their arms out to receive packets of biscuits thrown at them as handouts.
— AP Rohingya Muslims, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, stretch their arms out to receive packets of biscuits thrown at them as handouts.
 ?? Prof. Rakesh Sinha ??
Prof. Rakesh Sinha

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