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Arakan Magazine – Issue Q3/2025
Arakan Magazine – Issue Q3/2025

In This Issue: 

  1. Editorial: Myanmar’s Federal Vision Hinges on Rohingya Inclusion
  2. Myanmar’s Draft Law and Women Under Arms
  3. Independence Promises and the Systematic Stripping of Minority Rights in Myanmar
  4. The Arakan Army’s Divide-and-Rule Tactics Against the Rohingya
  5. Rohingya Security and Peace in Rakhine
  6. IIMM Shares Evidence of Crimes Against Rohingya with International Courts
  7. Dhaka Declaration: Rohingya Speak with One Voice
  8. A Mosque Reopens in Maungdaw but What Does It Really Mean?
  9. Rohingya Women are Forced into Arakan Army Ranks
  10. On the 8th Anniversary of the Rohingya Genocide the Crisis Continues, the World Must Act
  11. ARNO Expresses Concern Over Crisis Group Report’s Misrepresentation of Rohingya Realities
  12. Eight Years On, Genocide Against Rohingya Persists

Latest News

Myanmar Navy seeks arms from India

By admin

In a sign of growing proximity in military sphere, Myanmar on Monday sought naval arms assistance from India.The request came from Myanmar Navy’s Commander-in-Chief Vice Admiral Thura Thet Swe, who began a four-day visit to New Delhi by meeting with Navy Chief Admiral D K Joshi and Defence Secretary Radha Krishna Mathur.

Vice Admiral Swe also met Army Chief Gen Bikram Singh and Indian Air Force Vice Chief Air Marshal Arup Raha. Among others, Myanmar sought help in building offshore patrol vessels and supply of naval sensors and other military equipment to build a formidable navy.

Vice Admiral Swe discussed with Admiral Joshi various proposals for strengthening the navy-to-navy cooperation in operations, training and material support. He also proposed to take the existing relationship to another plane and promote capacity building and capability enhancement, an Indian Navy release said.

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Myanmar: UN expert welcomes latest release of prisoners, warns of ongoing arrests

UN News Centre

 29 July 2013 – A United Nations independent expert today welcomed Myanmar’s latest release of prisoners of conscience, but raised concerns over ongoing arrests of activists in the country.

“The release of prisoners of conscience continues to be one of the most tangible outcomes of Myanmar’s reforms. However, I am very concerned about ongoing arrests and sentencing,” said the Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Myanmar, Tomás Ojea Quintana.

Last week, President Thein Sein granted amnesty to 73 prisoners of conscience, as part of a series of reforms initiated two years ago following the establishment of a new Government. Mr. Sein stated during a recent visit to Europe that all remaining prisoners of conscience would be freed by year’s end.

While commending the Government for its recent actions, Mr. Ojea Quintana said the Government should stop arresting citizens for their politics and expressions of dissent with current policies.

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‘Non-Muslims are insulting our religion’

Bernama

Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said Muslims “do not insult” other religions.

PUTRAJAYA: Action that touch Muslim sensitivities must stop or else it will create tension just like what is happening in other Muslim countries.

Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin said the action by certain quarters should not happen in a country that is enjoying the peace.

“This shows that there is no deep understanding within society.

“Muslims do not insult the religion of non-Muslims such as Christianity and Hinduism.

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Maungdaw high level officers provide Rohingyas’ land to new settlers

Maungdaw, Arakan State: Maungdaw high level officers – U Kyi San, the Township administration officer and U Aung Myint Soe, the district administration officer – provided Rohingyas’ land to the new settlers Rakhine community who migrated from Bangladesh recently, said a village admin officer from Maungdaw.

“The officers tactically and forcefully confiscated Rohingyas’ land with or without reason and kept it open for project since 1992 when the Nasaka was established in northern Arakan.”

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AUTHORITY USES NEW TACTIC IN ARAKAN STATE

SM NETWORK: ARAKAN: Maungdaw, Arakan State: The authority from Arakan State used new tactic after dissolving the Burma border security force (Nasaka), but policemen and Para police (Hluntin) are arbitrary arresting and harassing the Rohingya people in Maungdaw south, said a local elder on condition of anonymity. Four Rohingya were arrested from Donkhali village by police and Hluntin personnel from Bodawpara police outpost, over the allegation that they were using Bangladeshi mobile phone on July 18, according to villagers.

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Police Confiscate Rohingya Laptops, Smartphones: Report

By Irrawaddy Government security forces have been entering the camps of displaced Rohingya Muslims in Sittwe Township, Arakan State, in order to confiscate laptops and smartphones, The Myanmar Times reports. A Rohingya activist in hiding in Sittwe claimed that more...

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Plight of Rohingya Muslims

Derek Tonkin

The article on Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar by Aijaz Zaka Syed was a thoughtful article. The problem of the Rohingyas is indeed historical, and the British are in large measure to blame for encouraging the uncontrolled migration of Indians — Hindus and Muslims — into Burma from the mid-1850s onward. I thought Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr got it right with his depressing comments his recent visit to Burma. There is a political dimension which is often overlooked. The British recognized that the Indian influx into Burma had created considerable problems, but it was too late to remedy these before the Japanese invaded in 1941. As James Baxter put it in 1940: “There was an Arakanese Muslim community settled so long in Akyab District that it had for all intents and purposes to be regarded as an indigenous race.” This was before the events of 1942 when the Muslims were forced to seek refuge in Northern Arakan.

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Australia says ‘no’ to Rohingya refugees

Sheikh Shahariar Zaman

‘We used to allow Rohingya refugees to settle in Australia, but not anymore’

Australian High Commissioner to Dhaka Greg Wilcock said his country had ceased taking Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh under its third-country settlement programme.

“We used to allow Rohingya refugees to settle in Australia, but not anymore. The last time we accepted a 100 Rohingya refugees – was in 2009-2010,” Greg Wilcock told the Dhaka Tribune after a press briefing at his Dhaka residence yesterday.

Australia ceased accepting them, as the issue of Rohingya refugees going to Australia for a third-country settlement would portray a “negative signal” to the ongoing crisis in the Rakhine state of Myanmar, he said.

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US planned to sanction disbanded border security force, say activists

By Bill O’Toole

Human rights groups say a controversial border security force that was disbanded last week was about to be sanctioned by the United States Treasury.

The decision to abolish the force, which is widely referred to as Na Sa Ka and has been accused of human rights abuses, was announced by the President’s Office in a statement on July 14. “It is hereby announced that Border Area Immigration Control Headquarters has been abolished,” the statement said, referring to the group by its official name.

The statement gave no reason for the decision and presidential spokesperson U Ye Htut declined requests for comment.

But human rights groups based both in and outside Myanmar have told The Myanmar Times that US sanctions against the security force were “imminent” and the decision to abolish the force was likely taken to stop the sanctions from being put in place.

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Reports

Nowhere To Go: Politics, Fear And A Whole Lot Of Good People

U Kyaw Thar is a decent family man. He contributes to charity, helps the needy and dotes on his children. The second time we meet, he apologises for being late because he was at his son’s birthday party, and then he leaves early because his wife wants him home for dinner. He’s a decent family man.

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