Friday, 30 May 2014
Ten Rohingyas Forced To Serve As Porters For Myanmar Military In Bangladesh-Myanmar Border Armed Conflict
Thursday, 29 May 2014
Myanmar refugee camps in poor condition after aid agency attacks
File photo: A displaced woman cares for her baby at a camp on the outskirts of Sittwe in Rakhine state, western Myanmar.
( AFP/Soe Than Win)
YANGON: Foreign aid agencies said conditions in refugee camps in Myanmar's Rakhine state have gotten worse compared to two months ago, as the agencies are only functioning at half the capacity they used to.
This comes after they were attacked by locals who accused them of providing more assistance to the Bengalis or Rohingyas.
Many foreign aid workers fled, and with the security situation still uncertain, some have not returned.
Two months after locals attacked foreign aid agencies in Rakhine, their operations are still severely impaired.
Pierre Peron, spokesman for UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said: "The infrastructure logistics that was in place, was affected by what happened. So that takes a while to build up again.
"We also find that it's becoming increasingly expensive to work in Sittwe, the capital of Rakhine and just in general because the landlords that rent properties to international organisations are increasing their price and that's simply because they themselves are getting threatened."
Such challenges mean that foreign aid agencies will not be able to respond quickly and effectively to any sudden health crises or natural disasters.
Those living in refugee camps are feeling the full impact.
Peron said: "The conditions, humanitarian conditions, for many people in Rakhine state were not good to begin with and it's even worse now.
"In some cases for example, they'd be given food and they would have to sell parts of the food every month to be able to buy things that they really, really need."
Foreign NGOs have identified over 300,000 people in need of help in Rakhine.
But with key medical aid agency Doctors without Borders still unable to operate there, the gaps are becoming increasingly difficult to plug.
Bertrand Bainvel from UNICEF said: "You have a lot of tensions, a lot of prejudice against the humanitarian development community especially in Sittwe.
"We have to enlist the support of the communities because at the end of the day, those suffering from these level of tensions, this level of restrictions that we face to the development, are actually the people. We saw the halving of nutrition surveillance activities among children living in camps."
The general sense of insecurity the aid agencies feel has also delayed some of their return.
Some of those living in the camps in Rakhine have no access to healthcare services.
International aid agencies said they do not sometimes have a clear picture exactly to what is going on, because they have no access to some of the camps.
Some of the aid agencies also told Channel NewsAsia that their local employees have quit for fear of their own safety. This is why many foreign NGOs are unable to say exactly when they will be fully functional again in Rakhine.
- CNA/xq
Sunday, 25 May 2014
8 Rohingya Families In Buthidaung Forced To Vacate Their Houses By Authorities
Wednesday, 21 May 2014
Myanmar Border Guard Police Kill At Least 36 Rohingyas In Myanmar – Bangladesh Border
Myanmar government legalize anti-Muslim genocidal racism and campaigns
Tuesday, 20 May 2014
A Rohingya Lady Gang-Raped By Police Officer And Village Administration
Saturday, 17 May 2014
A Rohingya Killed In Paik Thay, Minbya By An Unknown Group
Monday, 12 May 2014
THE JURIDISCTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND THE SITUATION OF MYANMAR’S ROHINGYA– SOME PRELIMINARY REMARKS
MYANMAR'S ROHINGYA– SOME PRELIMINARY REMARKS
MYANMAR'S ROHINGYA– SOME PRELIMINARY REMARKS
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Sunday, 11 May 2014
Interfaith Initiative Centre County | The forgotten people: Rohingya face harsh persecution in Southeast Asia
Sarah Malone, IICC convener
There are as many as 135 ethnic groups in Burma — the Kachin and Karen in the east and the Rohingya in the western state of Arakan, for example.
Some of these groups face ethnic cleansing and persecution. The Rohingya, who compose only 4 percent of Burma's population, are an ethnic Muslim minority from the state of Arakan in Burma, a predominantly Buddhist nation. The Rohingya are regarded by the United Nations as the most persecuted people in the world.
Social exclusion is arguably the most outrageous form of human rights denial based on a people's race, religion or ethnicity. But in addition to denial of citizenship, torture, burning down of houses, looting, rape and human trafficking are an everyday reality for the Rohingya.
Such well-planned and executed persecution by one group of people toward another is hard for civilized persons to comprehend.
The Burmese junta and the Rakhine Buddhist population are increasingly daring in inappropriate use of power. Absolute denial of human rights and powerlessness over their own lives have led to mass Rohingyan exodus to neighboring Thailand, Bangladesh, Malaysia and even Australia.
Helpless desperation has forced Rohingya Muslims to brave the high seas on rickety boats; such efforts often end in drowning.
It will never be easy to get exact numbers of people fleeing Burma, but thousands have fled government-sponsored discrimination and ethnic cleansing. Deplorable living conditions in refugee camps lead to disease, malnourishment and high infant mortality.
It is recognized that refugees or displaced persons and undocumented groups, especially coming from such transient situations, require a fully committed and specialized program to ensure their safety and protection.
In such situations, women and children are the most vulnerable and constitute a large number in the camps. Vulnerable Rohingya are an easy target for human trafficking in neighboring Thailand.
Global Alliance for Protection of Rohingya Women and Children is a nonprofit organization working to improve the lives of women and children in these camps. Two of its projects, Project Arakan and Project Maya, specifically focus on women and children.
Emphasis is placed on basic medical care, empowerment of women through self-help groups, capacity building for understanding the needs of their families and identifying and relocating women and children from forced confinement and sex slavery.
Recent attacks on the offices of the United Nations, Medecins Sans Frontiere and international NGOs by Arakan Buddhists have worsened the situation. All aid groups have been banned, cutting off life-saving medicines and food to the stateless, impoverished Rohingya community.
International intervention and pressure from the U.S., Europe and the United Nations could lead to a solution for a nation that discriminates and persecutes its people in the name of religion, race, ethnicity and culture.
Sarah Naeem Uddin is founder and director of Global Alliance for Protection of Rohingya Women and Children. She works at the business office of Young Scholars of Central PA charter school.
Saturday, 10 May 2014
16 Month Old Rohingya Baby Died In Sittwe Hospital; Dead Body And Mother Missing
Boatpeople Escape Shelter North of Phuket: Trafficking in Thailand Continues
The nine escapers were simply making their way along the ''human trafficking superhighway'' that runs through Thailand, according to US Congressman Chris Smith.
The nine escapers, who most likely fled into the arms of traffickers, were part of a group of 29 transferred from southern Thailand to the province of Phang Nga, north of Phuket, because of overcrowding.
Escapes have been frequent and traffickers living in the surrounding community at Khao Lak, a popular holiday spot, often bid for customers.
Sources with connections in Bangladesh and northern Burma say the Rohingya boats are leaving Burma with increasing frequency now, despite the onset of the dangerous monsoon season.
But what happens between the departure and the arrival of the boatpeople in southern Thailand remains a mystery.
Explanations are being sought by journalists, and by Thailand's Immigration Division 6 Commander, Police Major General Thatchai Pitaneelaboot.
He has ceased deporting Rohingya back to Burma (Myanmar) because he realises that the majority who are trucked from southern Thailand to Ranong, on the Thai-Burma border, are quickly embraced by traffickers and shipped south again.
Meanwhile, in the secret jungle camps where the Rohingya are hidden until they can raise the money to pay their way across the border to Malaysia, illness and death remain rife.
Phuketwan recently interviewed a young Rohingya who says he fled a jungle camp after burying 13 fellow inmates.
The women and children who arrived at the shelter north of Phuket last week were all thin and in poor condition. They were taken to alocal hospital for health checks.
Boats are sometimes delayed waiting for passengers, so those who board in northern Burma can have spent more than three weeks in cramped holds before arriving in Thailand.
The conditions in the jungle camps are even worse, which accounts for increasing numbers of deaths.
Yesterday came reports that the detainees at one Immigration centre in southern Thailand had gone without eating for two days because the meals they were served were not halal.
Lack of a transparent national policy to either halt the human trade through Thailand or to treat the boatpeople humanely leaves the Rohingya open to abuse and Thailand open to criticism.
Wednesday, 7 May 2014
An Innocent Rohingya Beaten To Death By Myanmar Military In Maungdaw
Tuesday, 6 May 2014
Is Rohingya Genocide In Burma Being Ignored ?
Last week the London School of Economics hosted a conference on the Rohingya, with academics, legal experts and human rights advocates from all over the world attending. The United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in Burma also addressed the conference.
What might surprise some is the main subject which dominated the conference, whether genocide was about to happen, or whether it had already started. It is a sign of just how bad things have got since the latest waves of attacks began in 2012 that this is the issue now being discussed.
Legal experts, academics, and NGOs working in Burma identified key elements of genocide which are taking place there. These included denying Rohingya legal existence and right to nationality; access to medicine, food, and other basic necessities to sustain life; policies of extensive structures of discrimination, and allowing and facilitating hatred and popular violence against the Rohingya. Combined, these threaten to lead to the extermination of Rohingya as an ethnic group in Burma.
"The United Nations has taken 20 years to apologise for its failure to recognise and prevent the Rwandan genocide; the international community should not repeat the same mistake in Myanmar," Prudentienne Seward, a survivor of the genocide in Rwanda, told the conference.
Within Burma debate about the Rohingya is very different. Aung San Suu Kyi has dismissed without viewing it evidence complied by Human Rights Watch that ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya has taken place. The Rohingya are characterised as foreigners, and very few people are willing to support our human rights. You might have thought that even if many people in Burma are racist and want us out of the country, they would still be opposed to ethnic cleansing being committed against us, and would condemn our homes being burnt, women raped, and children killed. But there is no public outcry, no domestic pressure for human rights violations against us to end.
If violations against us are to end, it needs intervention from the international community, it won't come from within Burma. But with even the Special Rapporteur on Burma stating that the human rights violations against the Rohingya may be crimes against humanity, and still no response from the international community, it is questionable what will finally prompt action. This is why the discussions on genocide take on a special significance.
The situation for the Rohingya has been bad for decades, but it has got much worse sinceThein Sein became President. There are around a million Rohingya in Burma, and every one of them is living in fear for their lives.
As Rohingya we are used to suffering. I have friends who were jailed just for getting married without government permission. At least 500 Rohingya are in jail today for this reason.
We have long faced restrictions on movement, restrictions on access to healthcare, to education, extortion, beatings, people disappeared, arrest , arbitrary executions and occasionally, mass killings. The list of human rights violations and repressive laws and policies have been well documented. Life for us was already intolerable. Now it is even worse.
We are subject to a systematic campaign to force us out of Burma. It is a campaign that has support from the highest level of the government, the President himself. He has called for help from the UN to expel all Rohingya from Burma. Through his actions, and by inaction, he has supported and encouraged violence against us. And he strongly supports the laws and government policies which discriminate against us, and which the UN Special Rapporteur on Burma has said may constitute crimes against humanity.
The government of Burma uses six main methods against us:
• Laws which discriminate against us.
• Incitement and encouragement of hatred against us.
• To disenfranchise us from any political representation.
• To starve us by stopping economic activity and restricting humanitarian access.
• To use state violence against us.
• To encourage and allow non-state violence against us.
A new form of apartheid is being created to segregate us. To put us into camps or isolated villages where life will be so terrible people will be forced to leave the country.
All this is happening today in a country which the British government, the USA, and other countries describe as making great progress, where human rights are improving, and is making a transition to democracy.
Organisations such as Human Rights Watch and Fortify Rights have already documented human rights abuses which may constitute ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. The Special Rapporteur on Burma has also stated that there may be crimes against humanity against the Rohingya. No government has supported these statements, but they haven't publicly disagreed with them either. Privately the British government, the USA, the EU and others know what is being done to the Rohingya violates international law. But they have chosen not to act. They have even chosen to be silent about international law and the Rohingya.
If legal experts are now discussing whether genocide is happening, or in danger of happening, will this prompt the international community to act? Given that they have ignored ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity, I am afraid this is a real possibility. I hope they will prove me wrong. I appeal to the world not to let another Rwanda repeat for Rohingya.
Tun Khin is President of the Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK.
Saturday, 3 May 2014
Death stalks Muslim minority group as Myanmar cuts off aid Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2014/05/03/3621742/death-stalks-muslim-minority-group.html#storylink=cpy
SITTWE, MYANMAR — By the time the baby girl was brought to the makeshift pharmacy, her chest was heaving, her temperature soaring. The supply of oxygen that might have helped was now off limits, in a Doctors Without Borders clinic shut down by the government in February.
Zatul holds her newborn grandson as his mother, Arnuwar Bagun, recovers in the Dapaing Emergency Hospital in Sittwe, Myanmar, April 22, 2014. The Rohingya -- a Muslim minority persecuted by Myanmar's Buddhist-led government -- have been segregated into camps where conditions have quickly deteriorated since the government began to severely restrict outside humanitarian aid. ADAM DEAN — The New York Times
Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2014/05/03/3621742/death-stalks-muslim-minority-group.html#storylink=cA hospital visit was out of the question; admission for Rohingya Muslims, a long-persecuted minority, always requires a lengthy approval process - time that the baby, named Parmin, did not have. In desperation, the pharmacy owner sent the family to the rarely staffed Dapaing clinic, the only government emergency health center for the tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims herded into displaced people's camps. Although it was just 4 p.m., the doors were shuttered."We became like crazy people, running everywhere," the child's grandmother, Mu Mu Lwin, said. With no good choices left, the family returned to the pharmacy, where Parmin died, untreated, three and a half hours later, cradled in her grandmother's arms.
A hospital visit was out of the question; admission for Rohingya Muslims, a long-persecuted minority, always requires a lengthy approval process - time that the baby, named Parmin, did not have. In desperation, the pharmacy owner sent the family to the rarely staffed Dapaing clinic, the only government emergency health center for the tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims herded into displaced people's camps. Although it was just 4 p.m., the doors were shuttered.
"We became like crazy people, running everywhere," the child's grandmother, Mu Mu Lwin, said. With no good choices left, the family returned to the pharmacy, where Parmin died, untreated, three and a half hours later, cradled in her grandmother's arms.
Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2014/05/03/3621742/death-stalks-muslim-minority-group.html#storylink=cpy
The baby's death was part of a rapidly expanding death toll and humanitarian crisis among the Rohingya, a Muslim minority that Myanmar's Buddhist-led government has increasingly deprived of the most basic liberties and aid even as it trumpets its latest democratic reforms.
The crisis began with the government's expulsion of Doctors Without Borders, one of the world's premier humanitarian aid groups and the lifeline to health care for more than 1 million Rohingya increasingly denied those services by their own government. But the situation has grown more dire in recent weeks, as local Buddhist officials began severely restricting other humanitarian aid to the camps and the rest of Rakhine state, where tuberculosis, waterborne illnesses and malnutrition are endemic.
Some aid workers fear they are being kept away so there are fewer witnesses to rampant mistreatment and occasional bloodletting; the doctor's group was expelled from Rakhine state aftercaring for victims of a violent assault on a Rohingya village that the government denies ever happened.
The scope of the government crackdown is serious enough that it has inspired at least some rebukes from world leaders in 2012 after near silence even as Myanmar's government ignored violence by local Buddhists that left hundreds of Muslims dead and drove many others into the displaced people's camps. Loath to criticize the government as it moves the country away from a military dictatorship, international leaders also fear losing out in an international scramble for Myanmar's business, and allegiance.
The Obama administration - which has been eager to keep strategically positioned Myanmar away from China - weighed in when the president admonished Myanmar's leaders during his recent Asian tour, saying: "Myanmar won't succeed if the Muslim population is oppressed."
And Tomas Ojea Quintana, who was the U.N. representative responsible for human rights in Myanmar until March, says the government's obstruction of humanitarian aid "could amount to crimes against humanity."
Even those foreign aid workers who have been able to return to work in recent days, do so amid heightened security fears. State government officials recently allowed a radical Buddhist monk to preach for 10 days in the region, stirring up passions among Buddhists. After the visit by the monk, Ashin Wirahtu, radical Buddhists ransacked the facilities of more than a dozen aid agencies, including the Red Cross, forcing more than 300 foreign aid workers to evacuate.
Two battalions of riot police and a Myanmar army division remained in their barracks.
With most foreign aid workers gone, it is impossible to accurately assess the number of deaths caused by the absence of lifesaving medical services; the government fails to keep or sharehealth records. Aid workers, however, say they see the evidence of a building crisis.
"For sure the deaths are accelerating," said Dr. Liviu Vedrasco, head of the health care cluster for the World Health Organization in Myanmar.
One indicator of the seriousness of the situation: Doctors Without Borders had sent about 400 emergency cases every month to local hospitals. In March, fewer than 20 people got referrals required by the government, according to WHO.
Some of the only aid currently being provided is food rations from the World Food Program, which has been allowed to deliver rice and oil to the camps, a move some aid agencies say they believe is aimed at averting the bad publicity that could come with mass starvation. Even before the slashing of other aid, though, the World Health Organization reported that the food program was not sufficient to prevent malnutrition in the camps in Rakhine state or to stop the chronic acute malnutrition in northern areas of Rakhine state where many other Rohingya live.
At a temporary clinic set up by wealthy out-of-state Muslims after Doctors Without Borders was banned, Maung Maung Hla, a volunteer medical assistant, surveyed the women clustered on the floor in front of him, holding emaciated babies. The children, he said, needed more than the one-time ration of vitamins he was offering.
"These children are only being fed rice," he said. "If these conditions continue, all the babies will die."
The Rohingya, denied citizenship, have long been outcasts in Myanmar, formerly called Burma. Many in the Buddhist-majority country believe the Rohingya should go to Bangladesh, even though many are not from there, or come from families that have been in Myanmar for generations.
The camps outside Sittwe, where more than 100,000 of the 1.3 million Rohingya in Myanmar live, were set up after the 2012 burning of the Rohingya neighborhoods in the town, a dilapidated trading center on the Bay of Bengal. Aid workers say the camps, where tight security prevents people from leaving, even to work, have become little more than sprawling prisons.
Until Doctors Without Borders was chased out of the region, some of the few people who got to leave the camps were the desperately ill, bound for the town's hospital. Now, even few of the sick leave.
In response to the recent international criticism, the Myanmar government spokesman, Ye Htut, this week told a radio network that "there is no state-sanctioned discrimination against Muslims." He also said there was no "outbreak of disease" in the camps because Myanmar's Health Ministry had stepped in to provide health care, sanitation and water.
But Vedrasco of the World Health Organization noted that Myanmar was ranked second to last - just above Sierra Leone - in the organization's list of medical services, and could not fulfill its promises.
Five government mobile medical teams were sent to Sittwe at the end of March, but they were barely seen.
In the camps, the deaths often occur behind closed doors, in the cramped rooms of the bamboo rowhouses built by the United Nations. Other people die in the small mom-and-pop pharmacies where desperate families like Parmin's go as a last resort.
Some of the most desperate cases are women with complicated pregnancies. Prenatal care is scarce, resulting in high numbers of precarious births.
These days, most pregnant women are reluctant to go to Sittwe General Hospital until it is too late, put off by the elaborate series of permissions needed, and by fear. As violence has increased, many Rohingya believe they will never emerge from the 14-bed ward set aside for them that used to be the prison ward.
Zhara Katu, 20, was one of many too frightened to go to the hospital. In pain and pregnant with twins, she instead chose the government-run Dapaing clinic. A Burmese doctor determined the babies had died and recommended she go to the Sittwe hospital for an urgent operation.
She went home instead.
Two days later, she returned to the clinic but was so ill, she was transferred to the hospital. Her father, Abdullah Mi, a scrawny, weather-beaten man, was terrified. "I worry that the Rakhine will kill her there," he said.
His daughter survived the procedure to remove the babies, but died in the hospital a week later of maternal sepsis, a condition that Vedrasco said could have been alleviated with earlier care.
By the last week of April, some aid workers for international agencies were trickling back to the camps, but reported facing conditions far less than the "return to normalcy" declared by the national Ministry of Home Affairs.
A new emergency coordinating committee established to oversee foreign assistance was dominated by two Rakhine Buddhist community leaders who demanded approval rights over their aid operations, a memo from the aid workers to the United Nations said. The memo said the committee "is failing absolutely in its role to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance in Rakhine."
It also urged the United Nations to take a more aggressive stance with the government, saying "there is a sense among nongovernmental organizations that at times the U.N. advocacy could have been more robust."
Sometimes, wondrously, camp medicine works.
One of the busiest men in the camps is Chit San Win, who once worked as a medical assistant in Sittwe, and is now a popular amateur doctor racing from call to call on his motorcycle.
He arrived at one call recently to find 4-year-old Roshan Bebe, lying unconscious, her head gushing blood after a motorcycle knocked her over. He came equipped with a medical kit he totes in a shopping bag - bandages, a few ointments, needle and thread.
As he cleaned and stitched the gaping wound, Chit San Win said he was concerned about internal bleeding that could prove fatal, but the child's mother refused to try the government hospital.
A few days later the girl was sitting up, eating and talking, and Chit San Win declared "a miracle."
There was no such happy ending for Nur Husain, 27.
On a recent day, he traveled to the same pharmacy where Parmin died. He slumped in a chair in the withering heat, gasping for air and running a temperature of 104 degrees. Maung Maung Tin, one of the pharmacy owners, called a doctor 400 miles away, and on that advice injected Husain with four drugs.
Two hours later, the muscular young man was dead.
It was unclear precisely what killed him, according to a Western doctor who reviewed the four medicines, which are commonly prescribed for asthma. But almost certainly, proper monitoring and the oxygen ordinarily administered by Doctors Without Borders could have saved him, said the doctor, who declined to be named because he did not oversee the case.
Husain's boss at a rudimentary bakery called him a "dynamic" man, who held one of the few steady jobs in the camp, earning $2 a day as manager. His wife, Roshida Begum, says she has no idea how she will now feed her two small children, and a third who is on the way.
The family buried Husain in a sandy plot on the shore of the Bay of Bengal within sight of tall, slender coconut trees etched against the blue sky. His shallow grave site, fenced with fresh badmboo, was surrounded by rows and rows of other graves dug in recent months.