What a Selfless Son! Man Carried His Parents in Baskets for a Week to Escape Burma's Death Squad (Photo)
They
have often been called the most persecuted minority in the world. The
1.1 million Rohingya Muslims squeezed precariously into the north-west
state of Rakhine, in mainly Buddhist Burma, bordering majority Muslim
Bangladesh, are stateless and unwanted.
Just inside Myanmar, where Islam and Buddhism collide, thousands of
desperate Muslim families are on the move. About 300,000 Rohingya
civilians have fled to Bangladesh since late August. Many people have
died trying to get out.
The inhumane treatment of the Rohingyas has tarnished the image of
Myanmar’s civilian leader and Nobel peace prize laureate Aung San Suu
Kyi, once a famously unflinching defender of human rights and darling of
the West.
She now faces international fury, particularly from Muslim nations,
for failing to stand up to armed forces chief General Min Aung Hlaing,
whose soldiers are accused of rape, murder, arson, and of ripping
Rohingya babies from their mothers’ arms and throwing them into rivers
and fire.
Ms Suu Kyi has publicly stuck to the military’s line that the
Rohingya are illegally squatting on the Burmese territory, leaving
fellow Nobel winner, Malala Yousafzai, aghast and urging her to speak
out against the tragedy.
The latest military crackdown, which began on August 25, caused
almost 90,000 Rohingyas to flee under fire to squalid, overflowing
relief camps across the Bangladeshi border in just two weeks.
Officially close to 400 people had died by early September, but
human rights activists claim to have confirmation of at least 1,000
deaths and believe the figure is much higher.
The death toll will inevitably rise after Burma, also known as
Myanmar, blocked UN agencies from delivering vital food, water and
medicine supplies to 250,000 Rakhine residents desperately in need.
Comments
Post a Comment