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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

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Asia-Europe ASEM Meeting Held in Myanmar, Despite the Continuous Persecution of the Rohingya Muslims

November 20, 2017

 

Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikha Hasina meets with visiting Chinese
Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, in Dhaka, November 19, 2017
Rohingya Muslims persecuted in Mynmar, with complicity of the world super powers, who are not doing anything to stop it.

 

Security beefed up for 13th ASEM Foreign Ministers' Meeting in Myanmar

Source: Xinhua| 2017-11-19 07:21:57

Editor: Zhou Xin

The 13th foreign ministers' meeting of the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM)  will be held on Nov. 20-21, 2017, in Nay Pyi Taw, Myanmar.

Bangladeshi PM meets Chinese FM on pragmatic cooperation, Rohingya issue

Editor: Xiang Bo

DHAKA, Nov. 19, 2017 (Xinhua) --

Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikha Hasina met visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi here on Saturday, with both sides emphasizing their willingness to further deepen pragmatic cooperation.

Hasina congratulated the successful holding of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, and thanked the Chinese side for offering long-term support and aid to Bangladesh's development and construction.

Last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping paid a historic visit to Bangladesh, establishing the strategic cooperative partnership between the two countries, Hasina said, adding that the Bangladeshi side is willing to further deepen pragmatic cooperation with the Chinese side in all fields.

For his part, Wang said China is willing to work with Bangladesh to firmly support each other on issues of core interests and major concern, and deepen China-Bangladesh strategic cooperative partnership.

He expressed the hope that the two sides could speed up the implementation of the Belt and Road Initiative, and actively push forward the building of Bangladesh, China, India and Myanmar-Economic Corridor.

The Chinese foreign minister also suggested the two sides to explore new cooperation areas such as maritime cooperation. China will continue to encourage Chinese enterprises to invest in Bangladesh, he added.

Hasina and Wang also discussed the Rohingya issue. Wang said the issue should be resolved by Bangladesh and Myanmar through dialogue and consultation, and expected the two sides to sign an agreement as scheduled on the repatriation of the Rohingya people who have crossed into Bangladesh.

China is willing to continue to offer support for a proper settlement of the issue, he added.

Wang also met with his Bangladeshi counterpart Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali on the same day.

Both sides agreed to strengthen mutual trust and mutual support, and boost cooperation under the framework of the Belt and Road Initiative.

Regarding the Rohingya issue, Wang stressed that it should be resolved by Bangladesh and Myanmar through dialogue and consultation.

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10 Things You Need to Know About the Persecution of Muslims in Myanmar (Burma)

Huffington Post, By Kyaw Min ASSOCIATED PRESS

By 1990, 15 years before I went to prison, the ruling generals had been in power in Burma for almost 30 years. In those days I was an elected member of the Burmese Parliament. Then in 2005, my family and I were arrested by the police. My wife, son and two daughters and I spent the next seven years in prison. They said our “crime” was declaring our rights as ethnic Rohingya. My jailers told me that speaking up for the Rohingya was giving Myanmar “a bad name” internationally.

In 2010, when the military leaders released pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest, I thought Burma was beginning to change for the better. Soon they announced political and economic reforms and they relaxed some restrictions on the press. A human rights commission was set up, under government control.

Some foreigners thought these small steps meant that the military was letting go its grip on Myanmar. The U.S. acted quickly to reward the generals. That was a signal to international investors to start looking for new markets in my country. In 2011, while my family and I were still in prison, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visited Burma. Then came an important visit by President Obama in 2012. That was followed by the U.S. decision to reduce trade sanctions and travel restrictions against Burmese leaders. Then early this year, my family and I were finally freed from prison.

But two years after all the talk about Burma’s “transition to democracy,” my Rohingya people are still being persecuted. Today, the Rohingya are where they were in 2005 when the police came to our house and took us away: we are stateless people, whose homes can be burned by mobs as the police stand by as idle witnesses.

 10 Things You Need to Know About the Persecution of Muslims in Myanmar (Burma):

1.    Burma has a Buddhist majority. Less than 9 percent of the population is Muslim but we are more than a million people.

2.    We are an ethnic people who practice Islam and speak the Rohingya language. Most of us live in the state of Rakhine, where my great grandparents and their great grandparents were born.

3.    In the last 18 months, Buddhist mobs have terrorized Muslims throughout Burma. More than 200 Muslims have been killed and mosques, homes and businesses have been burned, all while the authorities turned a blind eye. Today, almost 150,000 Rohingya are trapped in dirty refugee camps, living in bad tents, with not much food and not enough medicine. The police prevent them from coming and going as free people. Some refugees are killed under mysterious circumstances or simply disappear forever. Sometimes the bodies are dumped in unmarked graves. It is like a big outdoor jail. Many Rohingya people have tried to escape to other countries. Last month, 70 men, women and children drowned in an overloaded boat that should never have gone to the deep sea. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch and others have condemned “human rights violations” against the Rohingya.

4.    When the army seized power in 1962, it introduced discriminatory laws and Jim Crow rules. The Buddhist majority said Rohingyas were unwanted intruders. Today they call us “Bengalis” in the absence of any proof to make it seem we are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. It makes us feel like “aliens” in our own country.

5.    The Rohingya were full citizens of Burma until 1982. In that year a new law by the military government took away citizenship from Rohingya on the false accusation that they came to this country only after 1823 British occupation of Rakhine State.

6.    Today in Myanmar, we are not allowed to marry or have more than two children without government permission.

7.    Nobel prize winners like Nelson Mandala and Desmond Tutu and His Highness the Dalai Lama have spoken up for the Rohingya. Unfortunately, Aung San Su Kyi, our Burmese Nobel Laureate who is expected to contest for the presidency in the 2015 election, has not stood up for these persecuted people.

8.    The general census, which begins in a few months, may make things worse. The government says it will give the 135 so-called ethnic peoples a code number so each group to be counted in the census. But the government refuses to give us a code number. Instead, Rohingyas will be registered under the “foreigner” column, which some day may allow us to be deported from our own country.

9.    We need protection from mob attacks and property loss, surprise arrests and a court system that is stacked against us — all for the “crime” of being Rohingya. The United Nations recognizes our plight. On November 19th, the U.N. third committee passed a resolution telling Myanmar to give us back our citizenship. But the Burmese government rejected the resolution and accused the U.N. of violating its sovereignty.

10. It is sad but now the U.S. is considering military and financial aid to its newest friend: Myanmar. Before that happens, Americans should demand that the Rohingya, Myanmar’s most vulnerable people, receive full citizenship and equal protection under the law.

Kyaw Min Chairman of the Democracy and Human Rights Party in Burma

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/kyaw-min/myanmar-muslims-rohingya_b_4274852.html

***

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