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In This Issue:
- Editorial: Myanmar’s Federal Vision Hinges on Rohingya Inclusion
- Myanmar’s Draft Law and Women Under Arms
- Independence Promises and the Systematic Stripping of Minority Rights in Myanmar
- The Arakan Army’s Divide-and-Rule Tactics Against the Rohingya
- Rohingya Security and Peace in Rakhine
- IIMM Shares Evidence of Crimes Against Rohingya with International Courts
- Dhaka Declaration: Rohingya Speak with One Voice
- A Mosque Reopens in Maungdaw but What Does It Really Mean?
- Rohingya Women are Forced into Arakan Army Ranks
- On the 8th Anniversary of the Rohingya Genocide the Crisis Continues, the World Must Act
- ARNO Expresses Concern Over Crisis Group Report’s Misrepresentation of Rohingya Realities
- Eight Years On, Genocide Against Rohingya Persists
Latest News
Mosques, Homes Destroyed in Latest Burma Violence
Sectarian violence spread further into the heartland of Burma on Tuesday, with officials reporting at least two mosques and dozens of homes destroyed in riots.
Police and witnesses say there were no casualties reported in the overnight violence in two communities in the Pegu region north of Rangoon.
The violence has been spreading southward from the central town of Meikhtila, where clashes erupted last week, prompting a state of emergency.
The unrest has not yet reached Rangoon, Burma’s largest city. But tensions are high and many shops are being told to close early because of rumors of clashes.
State media Tuesday said the death toll from the Meikhtila violence reached 40, after eight more bodies were found during cleanup of the riot-hit town.The Dark Side of Burmese Freedom
Buddhist monks and politicians have used an unshackled media to stoke anti-Muslim violence.
By MURRAY HIEBERT
AND GREGORY POLING
Just two years into Burma’s reform program, the country’s transition to democracy is threatened from an unexpected direction. An unshackled media and new freedoms of speech and movement have contributed to religious tensions between Buddhists and Muslims exploding into violence.
Most Burma watchers hoped last year’s outbreak of violence aimed at the Rohingya was an isolated case, but the phenomenon is spreading. On March 20, anti-Muslim rioting swept the town of Meikhtila in central Burma, far from the Rohingya communities of Rakhine state in the west. Mosques and Muslim-owned shops and homes were torched, scores injured and entire neighborhoods left in ruins. Government media say 32 have been killed.
Burmese authorities declared a state of emergency on March 22, sending in the military to restore order. A tense calm hangs over the city and soldiers have begun delivering some food to 6,000 Muslims who fled to hurriedly established makeshift camps. But in recent days, anti-Muslim mobs have attacked several more towns in central Burma, wrecking mosques and burning houses, including in a village near the capital of Naypyidaw.U.S. Warns on Myanmar Travel as Deaths Rise
By SHIBANI MAHTANI
The U.S. Embassy has warned against travel to parts of Myanmar after clashes between majority Buddhists and minority Muslims that authorities said killed at least 40 people last week in the central town of Meikhtila.
The warning comes amid new reports of rising tensions elsewhere, including the Southeast Asian country’s largest city, Yangon.
The markets appeared peaceful Tuesday but have been on edge. “Yesterday we heard rumors of fights happening somewhere, so we closed our shops at about 2:30 p.m.,” said Ma Ohnmar, a Muslim women who sells clothing and accessories at one of the market areas. “But today most of the shops are open, including mine.”
Myanmar attacks staged with ‘brutal efficiency’: U.N. envoy
AFP –
Muslim homes have been targeted with “brutal efficiency” in deadly new unrest in Myanmar, a UN envoy who has just been to the troubled country said Tuesday.
Envoy Vijay Nambiar said that “incendiary propaganda” had been used to stir unrest between Buddhist and Muslim communities which has erupted again in recent days.
Nambiar has just been on a visit to Myanmar during which he met President Thein Sein and was taken to Meiktila where mosques were burned and charred bodies left in the streets in violence that started March 20.
“It seemed to have been done, in a sense, in almost a kind of brutal efficiency,” Nambiar told reporters at UN headquarters from Thailand.Jonathan Manthorpe: Burma’s religious violence threatens democratic transition
Rioting close to centres of power could be pretext for military to seize power
By Jonathan Manthorpe, Vancouver Sun columnist
The deaths and destruction caused by violence between Buddhists and Muslims in central Burma in recent days were not isolated incidents, but symptoms of deep-seated hatreds that could derail the country’s passage from military rule to democracy.
At least 32 people, mostly Muslims, were killed in five days of communal riots in the central Burmese town of Meikhtila. More than 10 mosques, Muslims’ homes and Islamic schools were destroyed and thousands of people, both Buddhist and Muslim, have fled the town.
There is a dispute about how the violence started. What seems certain is that it started in a gold shop run by a Muslim.UN Official Says Muslims Targeted in Burma
Margaret Besheer
UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations’ top official for Burma said Tuesday that recent sectarian violence in the central part of the country was “clearly targeted” against Muslim communities in the mostly Buddhist nation.
Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general’s Special Adviser on Burma, or Myanmar, as it is also known, just finished a short visit to the country where he met with officials and victims of the recent violence.
Speaking to reporters in New York via telephone from Thailand, Nambiar said he visited shelters where about 9,000 displaced persons – mostly Muslims – are staying after their homes were attacked and dozens were killed in the central city of Meikhtila. Nambiar said the attacks were carried out with near “brutal efficiency.”Deadly violence between Myanmar’s Buddhists, Muslims spreads to 3 more towns in heartland
Associated Press
YANGON, Myanmar – Anti-Muslim mobs rampaged through three more towns in Myanmar’s predominantly Buddhist heartland over the weekend, destroying mosques and burning dozens of homes despite government efforts to stop the nation’s latest outbreak of sectarian violence from spreading.
Sectarian violence spreads in Myanmar
AP
MEIKHTILA, Myanmar // Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Myanmar has spread to at least two other towns in the country’s heartland, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more.
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The president Thein Sein declared a state of emergency in the region on Friday and deployed army troops to the worst hit city, Meikhtila. But even as soldiers were able to impose order there after several days of anarchy that saw armed Buddhists torch the city’s Muslim quarters, unrest was reported in two other towns to the south.
Tensions persist between Buddhists and Muslims in Myanmar
By Phyo Wai Lin, Jethro Mullen and Kocha Olarn, CNN
Yangon, Myanmar (CNN) — Residents of the city in central Myanmar where clashes between Buddhists and the Muslim minority killed dozens of people last week struggled to resume their daily lives on Monday with a state of emergency still in place.
Even as an uneasy calm prevailed in Meiktila, the city at the heart of the unrest, police reported fresh arson attacks on Muslim properties in other areas, showing the challenges Myanmar authorities face in reining in communal tensions in this nascent democracy.
A group of Buddhists on Saturday night torched 65 houses and religious buildings in Yemethin Township, which is about 40 kilometers south of Meiktila and not under a state of emergency, according to Lt. Col. Aung Min, a spokesman for the Myanmar Police Force.Reports
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