(Picture-Ye Myint Aung – handsome?) |
countries to throw money into Burma and that perhaps they should hang on to
establish the smoke and mirrors of this beleaguered country first – then perhaps
you might want to trot along to the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand for
an event by Human Rights Watch.
companies are moving in and there is a tourist explosion. But let’s hang on a minute here.
Rohingya. And let’s not forget what they
are doing to the Kachin minority.
Pic – The Miller Project |
flagging up what has been happening to the Rohingya in Thailand – and notifying
the international media too I assume.
Suu Gyi. And they have a point. I interviewed her in 1988 after the mass
demonstrations and killing, in the lull before the military took full control
again. Of course it was not the major issue at the time, but it was a subject
she point blank did not want to discuss.
Who is not just a pretty face?
They also produced the following dialogue from an AFP story in 2009.
“Perhaps the most convincing evidence that Burma’s deeply
ingrained racism needs to be addressed remains a letter written in 2009 to Hong
Kong diplomats by then Consul General Ye Myint Aung, soon after the secret
”pushbacks” of Rohingya boats from Thailand were exposed.
A Flying Sporran Comment |
“He did not mince words. The Rohingya, he said, were ”ugly
as ogres.”
In a letter to all heads of foreign missions in Hong Kong
and local newspapers, he wrote: ”In reality, Rohingya are neither ‘Myanmar
people’ nor Myanmar’s ethnic group.
”You will see in the photos that their complexion is ‘dark
brown,”’ he added, noting that the complexion of Myanmese is ”fair and soft,
good-looking as well.’
He noted that his own complexion is a ”typical genuine
one” of the Myanmese ”gentleman” and ”you will accept how handsome your
colleague Mr Ye is.”
”It is quite different from what you have seen and read in
the papers. (They are as ugly as ogres),” Ye Myint Aung wrote.
your ire. (To read an anti-colonial viewpoint you can of course go to Burmese Days – George Orwell)
Crimes Against Humanity and Ethnic Cleansing of Rohingya Muslims
in Burma’s Arakan State
In June 2012, deadly violence erupted between Arakanese
Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims in four townships of Burma’s Arakan State. In
October, after months of meetings and public statements promoting ethnic
cleansing, Arakanese mobs attacked Muslim communities in nine townships, razing
villages and killing residents.
State security forces operating in Arakan State
are implicated in failing to prevent atrocities or directly participating in
them. One soldier told a Muslim man who was pleading for protection as his
village was being burned: “The only thing you can do is pray to save your
lives.”
Human Rights Watch’s investigation, based on visits to
Arakan state and interviews with over 100 persons, uncovered clear evidence of
government complicity in ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity against
Rohingya Muslims.
These abuses continue through today by authorities’ actions
to deny aid and impose severe restrictions on movement of the estimated 125,000
internally displaced persons in Arakan state.
Human Rights Watch will release its report, “All You
Can Do is Pray”: Crimes Against Humanity and Ethnic Cleansing of Rohingya
Muslims in Burma’s Arakan State, at the FCCT on Monday, April 22, from 10:30 to
12:00.
Featured speakers will be: Phil Robertson, Deputy Director, Asia Division, Human Rights
Watch, Matt Smith, report author and consultant, Human Rights Watch.
The event is free and open to the public. For more information email: RobertP@hrw.org
Quite a tragic photo that gent pleading for the lives of his children no doubt.
I hope the fcct meeting is 10.30pm and not am….allows time for a beverage or 3.
Thanks for the link to the Phuketwan…I had not known before reading all of this that it was happening to such an extent. Unbelievable really in this day and age.
Unbelievable in this day and age?
You have got to be kidding. The concept of human rights in S.E Asia is an oxymoron, always was and shall be for at least another generation or two or three, if not even longer than that.
Problem is, in world historical terms it was only 75 years ago when both Germany and Japan were practising industrial slaughter against those whom they perceived as their social inferiors. Now, given the reality that most of this region has only recently emerged from what may charitably be described as a feudal state it is scarcely surprising that they are quite uncivilised and savage in their conduct towards each other.
Nothing anyone can do. The Bangladeshis, from where the Rohingya originated, don't want anything to do with the problem so, frankly, they are buggered.
The only way to compel these Asians to act like human beings is to force them through economic sanction but that is not an option when one considers China calls the shots here. I fear the only viable solution for the Rohingya is to let them migrate to Australia which is apparently quite civilised and more than wealthy enough to accommodate them and has the space too.
The latter option is more likely to succeed than, say, a junta of Burmese generals typing out the UN declaration on Human Rights from memory.
Yes…unbelievable that in this day and age of technology and knowledge…that slave camps can and do still exist.
SEA manages to 'get' many other modern concepts…why you forgive them for being ignorant with this one ?
Taking Thailand as the focus, what modern concepts do they actually embrace rather than just paying lip service? Free press, government accountability, rule of law applicable to all without fear or favour,mmmmmmmm……..Oh I know, all those UN conventions such as CITES and Human Trafficking? Err, perhaps not.
Flogging a dead horse here Sam. Cambodia is the pits, Laos is still dwelling in some weird socialist dystopia, Vietnam is a totalitarian state, Burma of course is an abomination, Malaysia still arrests anyone they care to without trial under the security act, has no free press and is a corruptocracy, Philippines is a car accident which leaves Indonesia which could revert to a full on Islamic state with all that that would entail. I suppose one might single out Singapore but trade unionism and worker's rights are labelled as subversive and no one really gets a decent trial if you have offended the PAP.
Reckon that leaves the Aussies.
''Australia turns out to be a sensational place, albeit one of the most comfortably racist places I've ever been in. They've really settled into their intolerance like an old resentful slipper.'' A British analyst working for US television's The Daily Show gets it right. Intelligent Australians will sit back and watch the extermination of the Rohingya on the telly, just like the rest of the world's self-obsessed onlookers. Men, women and children who have nothing are, in the eyes of the world, worthless. Who needs them?
Thanks, Andrew, for giving the issue some air. What a shame the mainstream media is also full of comfortable racists. There isn't even a single Rohingya reality tv celebrity so they can't be worth saving, can they?
Now there is an idea…….'Rohingya Survivor'