By Aman Ullah
The proposal has
generated mixed reactions among the Rohingya community and activists who are
fighting to get the rights of Rohingya recognized by the Buddhist-majority
country and seeking to return to their homes.
The only way to solve Rohingya Crisis is here as US Congressman @BradSherman said: https://lnkd.in/grarqig
Since August 25,
more than 750, 000 Rohingyas have entered Bangladesh fleeing persecution in
Myanmar, making Bangladesh the fourth largest host country for refugees. For a
country with such a large population of its own, this has been a major burden,
one, which the international community is yet to fully realize, or at least
that is how it seems.
Read also: Rohingya Refugees Disappointed Again https://lnkd.in/gWux-8D
Refugee crises are
ridden with dilemmas. It is a dilemma for the oppressed to leave or stay; a
dilemma for governments to condemn or remain silent; a dilemma for countries to
refuse or let refugees in. And once they've done their part to take in a
certain “quota”, there's yet again a dilemma about doing “too much” for fear
that this would act as a pull factor. This has been the case with the Rohingya
refugees who have come to Bangladesh in previous exoduses and have had to face
restrictions such as limited access to education and no permission to work
despite being here for decades.
According to, The
Malaysian Insight of July 27, 2019, Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad has said
in an interview in Turkey that The Rohingya should be treated as Myanmar
nationals or gives them their own territory to form a state.
“Myanmar, of course,
at one time was made up of many different states. But the British decided to
rule Myanmar as one state, and because of that, many of the tribes were
included in the state of Burma. But now, of course, they should either be
treated as nationals or they should be given their territory to form their own
state,” said Mahathir.
He is the first head
of any government to publicly break the taboo of proposing to give Rohingya a
state of their own. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gJz5Mkg
The only way to solve Rohingya Crisis is here as US Congressman @BradSherman said:
However, while
meeting with some Hindu Rohingya families on July 28, 2019 in Bangladesh’s Cox
Bazaar -- where nearly a million Rohingya are taking refuge after being forced
out of their country -- Myanmar’s Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary Myint Thu
told reporters that his country will consider Rohingya as "foreign
nationals".
Read also: Rohingya Refugees Disappointed Again https://lnkd.in/gWux-8D
The Bangladesh
government has been globally lauded—and rightfully so—for welcoming with open
arms, once again, the persecuted Rohingya people with whom the country has a
checkered history. The Rohingyas came to Bangladesh in droves in 1978, 1992,
and the 2010s. But at this juncture, many are wondering just how the latest
influx of Rohingyas—the highest yet, numbering over 700,000—is going to pan out
in the longer term.
The dilemma the
government of Bangladesh is facing perhaps is a result of any government having
to tow the difficult line between humanitarianism and real politic. Taking ceaselessly on the burden of more and
more refugees turn into an opportunistic tool for the sending country (in this
case Myanmar) to achieve its internal objectives. The Myanmar Government is
taking cent percent advantage of Bangladesh's compassion to rid the entirely of
the Rohingya people from the soil of Arakan.
Despite persecuting the
Rohingyas for months, the Myanmar government still shows no remorse or
willingness to stop using violence, while paying lip service to calls for
peace. The international community has, meanwhile, done little more than issue
statements which have not helped to stop the hostile actions of the Myanmar
government towards the Rohingyas and its neighbour, Bangladesh. The China and
Russia too have opposed any strong international condemnation of the Myanmar
government's belligerent actions.
Refugee management
is not one-man show business and on the other hand Bangladesh—which is no
stranger to hosting refugees—has not been able to do a better job of refugee
management, particularly with regard to the Rohingya. A major reason behind
Bangladesh's inability to better manage the crisis is the utter failure of the
international community to pressurize the Myanmar government into bringing an
end to the repression of the minority in the first place, so that Rohingya
refugees stranded in Bangladesh would feel confident enough to go back.
In a nation which is
so deeply prejudiced to Muslims that even taxi drivers throw out passengers if
they are thought to be from a Muslim country -- as documented by an Australian
journalist, how can a solution be found which ensures that Rohingyas are not
treated badly?
Myanmar has
committed genocide and expelled the Rohingyas most savagely for not taking them
back through sweet discussions. In fact the terrible hatred against Rohingyas
is state sponsored one.
Moreover the
government is trying to retain the
Arakan under the military control by making all the Rohingyas stateless and all
the Rakhines homeless, land less and effortless for total sold out of the whole Arakan to the Chinese for the money
and security.
The simple demand to
take back the Rohingyas is no solution without ensuring their safety. Myanmar
may be found too eager to take them back to annihilate them.
The Rohingya crisis
has to be solved by international diplomacy. Bangladesh cannot solve the
problem alone through peaceful discussion. To think otherwise is to ignore the
need of urgent end to the miseries of Rohingya refugees.
Myanmar defied
international law by making Rohingyas stateless and committing genocide against
Rohingya Muslims. The problem has been complicated by Myanmar. No civilized
country can commit the brutalities done against the Rohingyas in their own
country. Rohingyas belonged to their own state, namely Rakhine State. The
country was occupied by Burma previously.
Many countries have
been divided as a solution when those countries could not learn to live
together. So why the international community through the United Nations should
not put hard pressure that as the solution the Rakhine State to be freed from
Myanmar.
Arakan was neither
purely a Burmese nor an Indian Territory until 18th century. Chiefly for its
location, it had not only remained independent for the most part of history but
also endeavored to expend its territory in the surrounding tracts whenever
opportunity came. Being separated from the rest of Burma by a long and high
impassible hill range of Arakan Yoma, the peoples of Arakan neither drank from
the same water with Burmans nor dependant on them for trade and commerce.
Neither of a single river flows from Arakan to Burma nor Burma to Arakan.
Across the last two
thousand years, there has been great deal of local vibrancy as well as movement
of different ethnic peoples through the region. For the last millennium or so,
Muslims (Rohingyas) and Buddhists (Rakhines) have historically lived on both
side of Naaf River, which marks the modern border with Bangladesh and Burma. In
addition to Muslims (Rohingyas) and Buddhists (Rakhines) majority groups, a
number of other minority peoples also come to live in Arakan, including Chin,
Kaman, Thet, Dinnet, Mramagri, Mro and Khami
etc.
The Muslims
(Rohingyas) and Buddhists (Rakhines) had been peacefully coexisting in Arakan over the centuries. Unfortunately, the
relation between those two sister communities began to grow bitter at
instigation of the third parties, during the long colonial rule of more than
two centuries. The anti-Muslim pogrom of 1942—in which about 100,000 Rohingya
were massacred, 50,000 of them were driven across the border to the east Bengal
some parts of Muslim settlements were devastated—have caused rapid
deterioration in their relation.
The history of
Independent Kingdom of Arakan came to an end by the invasion and occupation of
Burmese king, Bodawpaya, in 1784. After 40 years of Burmese rule the British
colonialist annexed Arakan to a British India in the first Anglo-Burma war of
1824 and it remained under British administration till Burmese independence on
January 4, 1948.
The British colonial
power transferred the sovereignty of Arakan on January 4, 1948, into the newly
formed ‘Union of Burma’ without the wish of the peoples of Arakan. The
Britishers violated this principle of separate juridical status of colonial
territories, when they transferred their legal ‘sovereignty’ over Arakan to the
Burma Union.
It is irony of the
fate that the portion of time preceding Burmese independence was a very dark
period for the people of Arakan. The people of Arakan hardly believe that the
Burmans govern them; but they strongly feel that they are colonized. After
being integrated into Burma the people of Arakan have been a part of unitary
state of the Union of Burma during which time they have been subjected to
brutal and inhuman treatment such as; human rights abuses, killings, rapes,
ignorance, poverty and social injustice and have been subjected to virtual
ethnic and cultural genocide.
In a vast political
reshaping of the world, more than 80 former colonies comprising some 750
million people have gained independence since the creation of the United
Nations. At present, 17 Non-Self-Governing Territories (NSGTs) across the globe
remain to be decolonized, home to nearly 2 million people. Thus, the process of
decolonization is not complete. Finishing the job will require a continuing
dialogue among the administering Powers, the Special Committee on
Decolonization, and the peoples of the territories, in accordance with the
relevant UN resolutions on decolonization.
In 1990, the General
Assembly proclaimed the first International Decade for the Eradication of
Colonialism, including a specific plan of action. The Special Committee on the
Situation with regard to the Implementation of the Declaration on the Granting
of Independence of Colonial Countries and Peoples, the United Nations entity
exclusively devoted to the issue of decolonization, was established in 1961 by
the General Assembly with the purpose of monitoring the implementation of the
Declaration (General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV) of 14 December 1960).
Under the General Assembly resolution 1514 (XV) of
14 December 1960, it is declared that: -
• The subjection of
peoples to alien subjugation, domination and exploitation constitutes a denial
of fundamental human rights, is contrary to the Charter of the United Nations
and is an impediment to the promotion of world peace and co-operation.
• All peoples have
the right to self-determination; by virtue of that right they freely determine
their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural
development.
• Inadequacy of
political, economic, social or educational preparedness should never serve as a
pretext for delaying independence.
• All armed action
or repressive measures of all kinds directed against dependent peoples shall
cease in order to enable them to exercise peacefully and freely their right to
complete independence and the integrity of their national territory shall be
respected.
• Immediate steps
shall be taken, in Trust and Non-Self-Governing Territories or all other
territories which have not yet attained independence, to transfer all powers to
the peoples of those territories, without any conditions or reservations, in
accordance with their freely expressed will and desire, without any distinction
as to race, creed or colour, in order to enable them to enjoy complete
independence and freedom.
• Any attempt aimed
at the partial or total disruption of the national unity and the territorial
integrity of a country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the
Charter of the United Nations.
• All States shall observe faithfully and
strictly the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and the present Declaration on the basis of
equality, non-interference in the internal affairs of all States, and respect
for the sovereign rights of all peoples and their territorial integrity.
The Special
Committee annually reviews the list of Territories to which the Declaration is
applicable and makes recommendations as to its implementation. It also hears
statements from NSGTs representatives, dispatches visiting missions, and
organizes seminars on the political, social and economic situation in the
Territories. Further, the Special Committee annually makes recommendations
concerning the dissemination of information to mobilize public opinion in support
of the decolonization process, and observes the Week of Solidarity with the
Peoples of Non-Self-Governing Territories.
Thus, the
sustainable solution to Rohingya crisis can only be found easily and peacefully
recognizing the Rakhine State as belonging to Rohingyas. The international
community should help to the peoples of Arakan to make their country a
decolonized and independent state where all the peoples of Arakan have the
right to self-determination; by virtue of that right they freely determine their
political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural
development. Otherwise the Rohinya problem will remain unsolved and the influx
of the Rohingya occurred again and again which will make burden on Bangladesh.
The Arakan problem
can be easily solved to the satisfaction of all the stake holders if the
Rakhine Buddhist is simply follow the golden rule of “Live and let Live”. This
will definitely put an end to all the mutual ill-feeling and mistrusts; and
there lies mutual happiness for all.