Special rapporteur on human rights calls on Aung San Suu
Kyi’s government to curb hate speech and attacks by nationalists
The Guardian
19 May, 2016
Myanmar must do more to prevent the drastic escalation of
religious intolerance and violence following clashes between ultranationalist
Buddhists and minority Muslims in Yangon, a senior United Nations envoy has
said.
Speaking to the Guardian, Yanghee Lee, the UN special
rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, called on the year-old National League
for Democracy government led by Aung San Suu Kyi to strengthen its efforts to
curb hate speech and violence drummed up by nationalist groups.
“I have, in the past, raised concerns regarding incidents
of hate speech, incitement to discrimination, hatred and violence, and of
religious intolerance, and these appear to be drastically escalating,” she
said.
“I believe that the spread of anti-Muslim sentiments and
rhetoric is not receiving the serious attention that it requires, and is too
often left unchecked by the authorities. This cannot be tolerated any longer.
The government must step up to take more concerted efforts to tackle and address
such incidents.”
Last week, a fight broke out in a Muslim neighbourhood of
Yangon after dozens of nationalists raided the home of a family they believed
was hiding Rohingya Muslims, members of a persecuted minority deemed by many to
be illegal immigrants.
The violence, which left several injured, came two weeks
after another radical group, involving some of the same people, forced the
closure of two Islamic schools.
While the Myanmar authorities have arrested several
Buddhists in connection with the recent violence, they bowed to nationalist
pressure to shutter the Islamic schools.
Zaw Htay, a spokesperson for Aung San Suu Kyi, declined
to take questions, saying he was in a meeting that would last all day.
In Yangon’s Mingalar Taung Nyunt township, the majority
Muslim neighbourhood where last week’s violence took place, many residents are
too frightened to talk. But inside her flat, 47-year-old Ma Win recalled how
nationalists, accompanied by police, stormed in shortly before midnight last
Tuesday and demanded to see identity documents proving the family was not
Rohingya. They broke off the door handles.
“I have borne five children in Yangon,” said Ma Win,
adding that she has lived in the city since she was a child. “So how dare they
say that I am an illegal immigrant?”
She said the raid had followed a financial dispute with a
member of a nationalist group. “We feel we are insecure here,” Ma Win said. “I
do not dare go out alone now.”
Yangon, the former capital and current commercial
capital, has been spared the worst of inter-religious clashes that have plagued
Myanmar in recent years. Violence between Buddhists and Rohingya Muslims
engulfed Rakhine state in 2012, leaving hundreds dead and thousands more
displaced, and it has spread to other cities, including Meiktila in 2013.
Several died in anti-Muslim riots in Mandalay a year later.
But until now Yangon, a city of more than 7 million
people and home to a sizeable Muslim population, as well as Hindus, Christians,
Sikhs, Buddhists and a small Jewish community, has remained unscathed.
“This area belongs to members of every religion – Hindus
and Buddhists … we are brothers and sisters living here,” said Soe Win, a
Muslim community leader in Mingalar Taung Nyunt.
Melissa Crouch, an expert on Islam in Myanmar at the
University of New South Wales, said an “intimidation campaign” was under way in
Yangon. Nationalist protests have previously shut down religious events
including birthday celebrations for the prophet Muhammad.
“To question the validity of a religious building’s
permit, or to make accusations about hiding illegal immigrants is just another
way to unsettle and disrupt the Muslim community in Yangon,” she said. “To
challenge any sense of belonging they still have, [and] to threaten them with
the brand of ‘outsiders’.”
Human rights groups suggest the deepening Rohingya crisis
in Rakhine state is worsening attitudes towards the country’s broader Muslim
community.
Kyaw Win, the executive director of Burma Human Rights
Network, said: “Because the narrative [about the Rohingya] includes so many
harmful stereotypes about Muslims it affects the perception of Muslims as a
whole.”
While Aung San Suu Kyi and her government have been
widely criticised for failing to speak out on behalf of persecuted religious
minorities, authorities this week arrested four people in connection with the
violence and are searching for three others, including two monks.
“But the fact remains that the authorities are still
capitulating to the demands of the ultranationalists,” said Richard Weir, Asia
research fellow at Human Rights Watch.
Additional reporting by Aung Naing So