Targeting Rohingya Muslims in Burma
(MENAFN - Arab News) AT last
somebody in an official position has said something.
United Nations human rights chief Navi Pillay has called for an independent
investigation into claims that Burmese security forces are systematically
targeting the Rohingyas, a Muslim minority community living in the Arakan
region. Even the Burmese government says at least 78 Rohingya Muslims were
murdered; their own community leaders say 650 have been killed.
Nobody disputes the fact that about 100,000 Rohingya Muslims (out of a
population of 800,000) are now internal refugees in Burma, while others have
fled across the border into Bangladesh. As you would expect, the Buddhist monks
of Burma have stood up to be counted. Unfortunately, this time they are standing
on the wrong side.
This is perplexing. When the Pope lectures the world about morality, few
non-Catholics pay attention. When Ayatollah Khamenei of Iran instructs the world
about good and evil, most people who aren't Shiite Muslims just shrug. But
Buddhist leaders are given more respect, because most people think that Buddhism
really is a religion of tolerance and peace.
When the Dalai Lama speaks out about injustice, people listen. Most of them
don't share his beliefs, and they probably won't act on his words, but they
listen with respect. But he hasn't said anything at all about what is happening
to the Rohingyas - and neither has any other Buddhist leader of note.
To be fair, the Dalai Lama is Tibetan, not Burmese, but he is not usually so
reserved in his judgments. As for Burma's own Buddhist monks, they have been
heroes in that nation's long struggle against tyranny - so it's disorienting to
see them behaving like oppressors themselves.
Buddhist monks are standing outside the refugee camps in Arakan, turning away
people who are trying to bring food and other aid to the Rohingyas. Two
important Buddhist organizations in the region, the Young Monks' Association of
Sittwe and the Mrauk U Monks' Association, have urged locals to have no dealings
with them. One pamphlet distributed by the monks says Rohingya Muslims are
"cruel by nature."
And Aung Sang Suu Kyi, the woman who spent two decades under house arrest for
defying the generals - the woman who may one day be Burma's first democratically
elected prime minister - has declined to offer any support or comfort to the
Rohingyas either.
Recently a foreign journalist asked her whether she regarded Rohingyas as
citizens of Burma. "I do not know," she prevaricated. "We have to be very clear
about what the laws of citizenship are and who are entitled to them."
If she were honest, she would have replied: "Of course the Rohingyas are
citizens, but I dare not say so. The military are finally giving up power, and I
want to win the 2015 election. I won't win any votes by defending the rights of
Burmese Muslims."
Nelson Mandela, with whom she is often compared, would never have said anything
like that, but it's a failure of courage on her part that has nothing to do with
her religion. Religious belief and moral behavior don't automatically go
together, and nationalism often trumps both of them. So let's stop being
astonished that Buddhists behave badly and just consider what's really happening
in Burma.
The ancestors of the Rohingyas settled in the Arakan region between the 14th and
18th centuries, long before the main wave of Indian immigrants arrived in Burma
after it was conquered by the British empire during the 19th century. By the
1930s the new Indian arrivals were a majority in most big Burmese cities, and
dominated the commercial sector of the economy. Burmese resentment, naturally,
was intense.
The Japanese invasion of Burma during the World War II drove out most of those
Indian immigrants, but the Burmese fear and hatred of "foreigners" in their
midst remained, and it then turned against the Rohingyas. They were targeted
mainly because they were perceived as "foreigners", but the fact that they were
Muslims in an overwhelmingly Buddhist country made them seem even more alien.
The Rohingyas of Arakan were poor farmers, just like their Buddhist neighbors,
and their right to Burmese citizenship was unquestioned until the Burmese
military seized power in 1962. However, the army attacked the Rohingya and drove
some 200,000 of them across the border into Bangladesh in 1978, in a campaign
marked by widespread killings, mass rape and the destruction of mosques.
The military dictator of the day, Ne Win, revoked the citizenship of all
Rohingyas in 1982, and other new laws forbade them to travel without official
permission, banned them from owning land, and required newly married couples to
sign a commitment to have no more than two children. Another military campaign
drove a further quarter-million Rohingyas into Bangladesh in 1990-91. And now
this.
On Sunday former general Thein Sein, the transitional president of Burma,
replied to UN human rights chief Navi Pillay: "We will take responsibilities for
our ethnic people but it is impossible to accept the illegally entered Rohingyas
who are not our ethnicity." Some other country must take them all, he said.
But the Rohingyas did not "enter illegally", and there are a dozen "ethnicities"
in Burma. What drives this policy is fear, greed and ignorance - exploited, as
usual, by politicians pandering to nationalist passions and religious prejudice.
Being Buddhist, it turns out, doesn't stop you from falling for all that.
Surprise.
- Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are
published in 45 countries.