Posted on 12 June 2012 - 01:59pm
Last updated on 12 June 2012 - 02:55pm
Last updated on 12 June 2012 - 02:55pm
SITTWE (June 12, 2012):
International pressure mounted for an end to religious violence raging
in western Myanmar, where armed police on Tuesday patrolled a flashpoint
region devastated by rioting and arson.
The United States urged an immediate end to the deadly sectarian
unrest, which has forced the United Nations to evacuate foreign workers
from Rakhine state, now under a state of emergency.
At least seven people have died since Friday, according to officials,
in a cycle of apparent revenge attacks between Buddhists and Muslim
Rohingya that presents a major test of fragile reforms since army rule
ended last year.
Rights organisations fear the real toll could be much higher with one
advocacy group which works with the Rohingya, The Arakan Project,
saying dozens of people had been killed.
AFP could not verify that information and its team of
reporters has been unable to visit many of the affected areas for
security reasons.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Monday called for "all
parties to exercise restraint", adding the "the United States continues
to be deeply concerned" about the situation.
The United Nations has begun pulling out more than 40 workers --
including foreigners -- and their families from a base in Maungdaw, an
area home to large numbers of Rohingya where clashes have also been
reported.
Warning that the violence is running "out of control", New York-based
Human Rights Watch called for international observers to be deployed in
Rakhine to "put all sides on notice that they were being closely
watched."
"The government needs to be protecting threatened communities, but
without any international presence there, there's a real fear that won't
happen," said Elaine Pearson, HRW's deputy director.
Gunfire echoed across the outskirts of the state capital Sittwe on
Monday as groups of men, who appeared to be ethnic Rakhine Buddhists,
roamed the streets wielding sticks and knives. A dusk-to-dawn curfew has
been imposed.
Rakhine, a predominantly Buddhist state bordering Bangladesh, is home
to a large number of Muslims including the Rohingya, described by the
United Nations as one of the world's most persecuted minorities.
The Myanmar government considers the Rohingya to be foreigners, while
many citizens see them as illegal immigrants and view them with
hostility, describing them as "Bengalis".
An AFP reporter witnessed heavy security overnight in
Sittwe, as rumours swirled among nervous residents that groups of
Rohingyas were approaching the heart of the city, despite the security
lockdown.
Rioting has seen hundreds of homes torched across the state, forcing both Buddhists and Rohingya to flee seeking safety.
Bangladesh border guards Monday turned back eight boats carrying more
than 300 Rohingya Muslims, including weeping women and children, as it
attempts to prevent a influx of refugees reaching its shores.
Tensions erupted following the recent rape and murder of a Rakhine
woman, allegedly by three Muslims. In response an angry Buddhist mob
beat 10 Muslims to death earlier this month.
The violence poses a serious challenge to Myanmar's reformist
President Thein Sein, as the nation takes tentative steps towards
democracy after decades of authoritarian rule.
A commentary published Tuesday in government mouthpiece the New Light
of Myanmar warned continued ethnic strife could also put the unity of
the country in jeopardy.
Under the headline "A single spark may well set the whole hillside on
fire", the piece urged unity across Myanmar's dozens of ethnic groups.
Animosity between local Buddhists and the Rohingya appears
increasingly intractable with both sides trading angry accusations over
the surge in violence, much of it playing out over social networking
websites.
Myanmar's Muslims -- of Indian, Chinese and Bangladeshi descent --
account for an estimated four percent of the roughly 60 million
population in a country where for many people Buddhism forms an
intrinsic part of national identity.
According to the UN, there are nearly 800,000 Rohingya living in
Myanmar, mostly in Rakhine. Another one million or more are thought to
live in other countries.
Around 600 Rohingya on Tuesday demonstrated in the Malaysian capital
Kuala Lumpur against the raging unrest in Myanmar, demanding UN
intervention to restore peace. – AFP
Source: The Sun Daily
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