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In This Issue:
- Editorial: Rohingyas are in a geopolitical crossroad: Global Powers and Competing Interests
- Rohingya Resilience in Exile: Rebuilding Lives in Refugee Camps
- Containing Arakan Army: A Security Imperative for Myanmar and Bangladesh
- Ending Digital Violence against Women and Girls
- Myanmar’s Election: Conflict, Exclusion, and a Crisis of Legitimacy
- Rohingya Families in Maungdaw Prepare to Flee Amid Forced Conscription Fears
- Arakan Army Orders Rohingya to Surrender Household Registration Lists
- Fire Tears Through Rohingya Camp in Cox’s Bazar, Injuring Three Children and Destroying Dozens of Shelters
- Rohingya Men and Women Forced to Join Armed Group in Maungdaw
- ARNO Welcomes UN Third Committee Resolution on Rohingya Rights, Demands Accountability for Armed-Group Abuses
Latest News
Thandwe ‘Stable’ After Anti-Muslim Attack: Official
RANGOON — Government security forces have stabilized the situation in Thandwe after an outbreak of anti-Muslim violence destroyed four homes in the town in southern Arakan State on Sunday, a local official said. He added that one Muslim man was arrested for an alleged rape case that sparked the unrest.
Zaw Moe Aung, an official at Thandwe Township’s department for information and public relations, said three Muslim-owned homes were torched and another destroyed on Sunday night, while several cars were damaged.
“The situation is more stable now, and all shops and schools are open as usual. Security forces have been deployed in the town,” he said on Monday afternoon, adding that a curfew had been imposed.
Zaw Moe Aung said that authorities were investigating the violence but had yet to make any arrests.
He said reports of the alleged rape of a Buddhist woman named Su Su Mon, 18, by a Muslim man named Min Naing, 29, had caused the unrest on Sunday night. “We have detained one person who allegedly raped the woman. He was a motorbike taxi driver and he is Kaman, a Muslim man,” the official said.GlobalPost hosts Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar’s capital
NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar — There was an elegant determination to her walk as Aung San Suu Kyi led an entourage of advisers and loyal followers of her National League for Democracy into a hotel ballroom on a steamy, rain-swept hillside overlooking this newly built capital.
Coming straight from the opening of a fateful parliamentary session where constitutional reform and press freedom laws topped the agenda, the pro-democracy leader and Nobel laureate spoke Thursday to a group of 20 top, young journalists brought together by GlobalPost in partnership with the Open Hands Initiative, a non-profit organization dedicated to public diplomacy.
“The Lady,” as she is commonly referred to here, viewed some of the work of the 20 journalists — eleven from Myanmar and nine from the United States — who have set out together as one team on a reporting journey through a changing Myanmar. She spoke on the importance of press freedom, and the need for the young reporters to recognize the opportunity — and the responsibility — they have covering a country trying to find its way along a path toward democracy.
“Greater freedom means greater responsibility, greater challenges and so we need greater wisdom to deal with the new opportunities that are open to us,” Aung San Suu Kyi told the group, citing “integrity, accuracy, independence and powerful storytelling” as four pillars that support great journalism.Rohingya detainees in Thailand face dire conditions
HAT YAI, 28 June 2013 (IRIN) – Human rights groups are calling for improved living conditions for close to 2,000 Rohingya boat people now in detention in Thailand.
“Thailand locks away Rohingya in heavily overcrowded detention centres when they should be treating them as asylum seekers who need to be protected,” Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s (HRW) Asia division, told IRIN.
Since January, 1,958 people have been apprehended by Thai authorities as they make their way to southern Thailand from Myanmar and Bangladesh, often in rickety, overcrowded boats, after weeks at sea.
Calling them “illegal immigrants,” authorities have put 1,554 Rohingya men in overcrowded immigration detention centres (IDCs). Some 404 women and children are being held in government-run shelters where, according to HRW, reports of trafficking are emerging.Why Does Aung San Suu Kyi Not Speak Up?
Peter Popham on why Aun San Suu Kyi is silent on the murder of Muslims
There is no concealing the disappointment felt by many of Aung San Suu Kyi’s supporters around the world in the face of her failure to denounce the attacks on Burmese Muslims by members of her own community, the Buddhists who constitute more than 90 per cent of the population.
Perhaps she couldn’t stop it, people say, but at least she could have taken a stand. She is seen as the teacher, the mother of her nation; moral rebirth has been at the centre of her mission ever since she signed up with the democracy movement; her most influential essay was titled A Revolution of the Spirit. How can she possibly stay silent as Muslims are slaughtered?
The first attacks came in June 2012, just as she was embarking on her first trip abroad in 24 years. A young Buddhist woman in Arakan state, which borders the overwhelmingly Muslim nation of Bangladesh in the west, was raped and murdered by two Muslim men. In retaliation, a group of non-Muslim men stopped a bus and killed the Muslims on board, and the spiral of murder quickly got out of control. There were many victims on both sides but the Muslims were in the majority. Many thousand lost their homes and were resettled in squalid temporary camps.‘Burma Army Attacks Christian Kachin; Two Killed’
By BosNewsLife Asia Service with reporting by BosNewsLife’s Stefan J. Bos
YANGON, BURMA (BosNewslife)– Burma was under pressure Sunday, June 30, to halt violence against the predominantly Christian Kachin minority after at least two civilians were reportedly killed by government troops.
Rights group Christian Solarity Worldwide (CSW) identified one of those killed as Zahkung Lum Hkawng, 45, who it said was “tortured, beaten and shot dead by the Burmese Army” in the Asian country’s Northern Shan State on June 14.
The attack shortly after the Burmese government and the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO) signed an accord aimed at ending hostilities between the two sides.
CSW investigators said that Lum Hkawng’s ordeal began as he was taking his turn as security guard for his village, Nawng Hen, when Burmese troops entered the area, demanding that the village head provide a guide for them.
Lum Hkawng was allegedly forced to accompany the troops to Mung Ya Hka Zup village where they clashed with the Kachin independence Army (KIA), the armed wing of KIO.A Muslim neighborhood in Myanmar becomes a virtual prison as sectarian divide hardens
By Associated Press, Published: June 30
SITTWE, Myanmar — From inside the neighborhood that has become their prison, they can look over the walls and fences and into a living city.
Stores are open out there. Sidewalk restaurants are serving bottles of Mandalay beer. There are no barbed-wire roadblocks marking neighborhood boundaries, no armed policemen guarding checkpoints. In the rest of Sittwe, this city of 200,000 people along Myanmar’s coast, no one pays a bribe to take a sick baby to the doctor.
But here it’s different.
___
EDITOR’S NOTE — This story is part of “Portraits of Change,” a yearlong series by The Associated Press examining how the opening of Myanmar after decades of military rule is — and is not — changing life in the long-isolated Southeast Asian country.UNITED TO END THE SILENCE ON APARTHEID AND ETHNIC CLEANSING IN BURMA – #Rohingya #Rohingyas #Burma
Petition by
Rokhaya DIALLO Sophie ANSEL Mahor CHICHE
Paris, France
President of Burma, Thein Sein, has announced his visit, mid of july, in Britain and France. In view of this visit, his UK and french homologues: David Cameron and François Hollande, have the responsability to adress a dramatic reality of Burma : The ethnic Cleansing and a state of apartheid. Those issues have been largely neglected by world leaders since a year. Together with silence and laxity, they no longer can be tolerated.
In the spring of 2011, the military junta withdrew from Burma. The former generals swapped their military uniforms for civilian clothes. They have promised reforms, releasing Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate and icon of democracy and human rights, now an elected member of parliament. Since then, the country gives signs of genuinely embracing the process of democracy. Much as Burma’s top-down political liberalisation needs to be welcome and supported, we must not gloss over the grave on-going injustices, crimes against humanity, segregation and ethnic cleansing.Declare 969 Buddhist Extremist Network as International Terror Network
Petition by
NY Kogyi
Queens, United States
Innocent Muslims are being killed while police are watching and do nothing!
To:
Presidents and Prime Ministers of the world’s community of nations:
John Kerry, U.S. Department of State
Barack Obama, President of the United States
William Hague, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
José Manuel Barroso, European Union (EU)
The violence and atrocities against Rohingya and Myanmar Muslims in Burma, committed by the radical Buddhist 969 groups backed by the Burmese Government forces have resulted in gruesome deaths of thousands of Rohingya and Myanmar Muslims in Burma. Additionally, the group’s terrorist attacks have resulted in destruction of thousands of homes and properties and displacement over 140,000 Rohingya and Myanmar Muslims in Burma.
Malaysia urges Myanmar to stem anti-Muslim violence
Reuters
Manuel Mogato 22 hours ago PoliticsReligion
By Manuel Mogato
(Reuters) – Malaysia urged Myanmar on Sunday to take stronger action to prevent persecution of Muslims and bring the perpetrators to justice, the latest sign that the inter communal violence is straining ties in Southeast Asia.
Thousands of ethnic Rohingya Muslims have fled Myanmar to escape the violence and worsening living conditions, many of them making their way by boat or overland to Muslim-majority Malaysia.
Anti-Muslim violence in Buddhist-dominated Myanmar erupted in western Rakhine State last year and has spread into the central heartlands and areas near the old capital, Yangon.
“Myanmar has to address the problem,” Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman told reporters at a meeting of Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) ministers in Brunei, making a rare intervention in another member’s internal affairs.Reports
THE SITUATION OF MUSLIMS IN BURMA
By Kyaw Zwa
History
The dawn of Muslim settlements and propagation of Islam has been widely documented by Arab, Persian, European and Chinese travelers of the ninth century AD.
The current population of Burmese Muslims are the descendants of Arabs, Persians, Turks, Moors, Indians, Chinese and Malays, who settled and intermarried with local Burmese and many ethnic Burmese groups such as Kachin, Kaya, Kayin, Chin etc
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