Myanmar's Anti-Muslim Monks
1 2015-10-28T05:59:07-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191 6684 1 Buddhist monks were a symbol of hope and defiance during the dark years of Myanmar's military dictatorship. But as the country opens up to the world, some ... plain 2015-10-28T05:59:07-07:00 YouTube 2014-11-13T07:30:01.000Z GtAl9zJ3t-M Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191This page has annotations:
- 1 2015-10-28T05:59:23-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191 Anti-Muslim Xinwei Zhang 4 plain 2015-10-30T04:50:21-07:00 Xinwei Zhang 748470782c039ff427b2806bd3bb61ec933e2191
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Persecution of Ethnic and Religious Groups
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Amid nationwide ceasefire talks, fighting between the Burmese government and ethnic armed groups intensified in 2014.
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Minority ethnic groups such as the Karen and the Rohingya people have faced persecution and been subjected to forced labor. Rape has also been used as a systematic weapon against women of ethnic minorities too, and thousands of villages comprised of minority ethnic groups have been destroyed, many burnt and razed to the ground, and their inhabitants displaced.
Burma is one of the most ethnically diverse countries in the world. Within the eight main ethnic groups inhabiting the country, anthropologists have counted more than 130 distinctive subgroups. Of the estimated population of 55 million, the largest ethnic group, the Burmans, or Bamar, form about 68%. Occupying mainly territories in the various border regions are other ethnic groups, such as the Chin, Kachin, Karen, Mon, Rakhine, Shan, and Wa.
1.Persecution of the Karen People
Among minority groups in Myanmar (Burma), the Karen are one of the most persecuted minorities. Since 1990 around 2.000 villages have been plundered and burnt to the ground. People are randomly tortured and killed, men and youth kidnapped to be forced porters and living mine detectors, women systematically raped.2. Persecution of the Rohingya People
“the Worlds’ Most Persecuted Minority”
— UN Secretary General Ban Ki MoonAnother persecuted minorities are the Rohingya. Discrimination against the Rohingya, a Muslim ethnic minority group, is traced back to the government of Ne Win in the 1960, which claimed them as foreigners. They continued to be denied not only Burmese citizenship but as an ethnic group as well as other fundamental human rights by the government. Meanwhile, they face restrictions on freedom of movement across the whole country.
Violence against Muslims in Myanmar
Although Myanmar (Burma) is a multi-religious country, Myanmar is a predominantly Buddhist country and the government shows preferences for Theravada Buddhism. It was the first country in the Southeast Asian to adopt Buddhism as the state religion in the 11th century. Approximately 87% of the population practice Theravada Buddhism. Monks are given the highest respect and priority. Anti-Muslims rooted in the country’s colonial history and demographics, and the rise of Burman-Buddhist nationalism in that context. Among the most discriminated against populations in Myanmar is the Muslim community in northern Rakhine State, the Rohingya.
1. 969 Movement
The 969 Movement (Burmese: ၉၆၉ သင်္ကေတ) is a nationalist movement opposed to what they see as Islam’s expansion in predominantly-Buddhist Burma.
2. Burma anti-Muslim riots since 2012
Since 2012, there has been a vicious series of pogroms against the Rohigyas. Villages, schools and mosques have been attacked and burned by Buddhist mobs, often aided by security forces. Hundreds of Rohingya have been killed, and as many as 140,000 people have been made homeless.
3. Rohingya refugee crisis in 2015
In 2015, thousands of Rohingya people fled Myanmar to Southeast Asian countries, including Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, among 37,000 people who were taken to boat by human traffickers from January to June while on their journey after the traffickers abandoned them on the sea. -
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Refugees from Myanmar (formerly Burma)
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“The struggle for democracy and human rights in Burma is a struggle for life and dignity.”
- Aung San Suu Kyi
Since Burma’s independence in 1948, various ethnic minority groups have pursued a higher level of autonomy. To fight against the aggression of the military government, ethnic insurgent groups adopted guerrilla-style tactics. In response to this, in the 1960s, the government started counter-insurgency strategy called Four Cuts that was designed to cut four main sources between insurgents, their families and local villagers, including food, funds, intelligence, and recruits. Because of the armed conflicts and political oppression, since 1984, thousands of refugees who fled Burma because of human rights abuse and persecution by Burmese military junta have lived in confined refugee camps in Thailand for over 30 years.
History of Myanmar (formerly Burma)
Although there was no Four Cuts any more after 1993, people in Burma still continue to lose their land because either large-scale agriculture and jade mining or military occupation, which continues to deconstruct communities and forced migration of ethnic groups (South, 2007). Meanwhile, ethnicity/religion is a big problem in Myanmar. Rohingya Muslim minority have been denied Burmese citizenship since 1982 by Citizenship Law and still flee by sea due to communal violence in Burma.
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