By Harun Yahya
Since 2012, a place called Rohingya in Myanmar has been grabbing
international headlines, with reports of people being hunted down and killed,
villages being put to the torch, and refugees being stranded at sea after
neighboring countries refused to let them in.
So what’s going on in Myanmar?
The Rohingya Muslims are a minority in Myanmar that once ruled
the region with a kingdom that lasted for 350 years. Later, the tide turned and
the Rohingya became a minority in their own homeland. Today, they are known as
the most persecuted people in the world, stateless and seemingly unwanted by
anyone.
If you are a Rohingya you have
two choices:
1)
You can stay at home. But that means;
- Being forced to live in
dismal camps with no freedom to leave, frequent attacks by extremist mobs,
which includes being burned to death, and your house being burned down. Also
you will be denied citizenship rights and you cannot rely on the security
forces, as what happened until now make it clear. From 1942 to 1996, two
million people were forced to flee their homes, 15,000 settlements were razed
to ground, 300,000 people were slaughtered and 20,000 women were raped. 5,000
mosques were destroyed and in 2012, the attacks flared up with 330 villages
burned down with their residents in them. Moreover, if you choose to stay, you
cannot go to state hospitals, own a motor vehicle or even a telephone. If your
house, which by the way can only be wooden, burns down by mistake, you will
face up to six years in prison.
2) Migrate somewhere else. But
go where? Bangladesh, although itself a Muslim country, chooses to close its
doors in the faces of these traumatized people crammed onto makeshift boats,
leaves them stranded in the ocean and most of the time, those boats sink with
everyone onboard. What are the other options? Go to Thailand, and if they
accept you (though unlikely), risk being captured by human traffickers and sold
as slaves (Reuters recently uncovered a massive human trafficking scheme that
involved Thai immigration officers.) However, most of the time Thailand doesn’t
accept these people and leaves them stranded at sea. There is even
footage of people being handcuffed and pushed into the sea from behind by Thai
officials. Malaysia graciously offers a home to these poor people, but it is a
distant land to reach with such unreliable boats. The USA has recently
offered shelter to some and although the act is highly laudable, the numbers
are incredibly low and therefore far from being a real solution to the ordeal
of the world’s most persecuted people.
As hard as it is to believe,
these painful incidents are happening as you read these words, or as you watch
your favorite TV show. Most recently, Doctors Without Borders were banned from
working in the country as they were accused of favoring the Rohingya; sadly,
DwB were the only medical treatment the Rohingya Muslims could obtain.
Again, recently Du Chee Yar Tan
village was the scene of fresh attacks by Myanmar security officials and
radical Buddhists. The village was closed off, but five Muslim men snuck into
the area to find the severed heads of at least 10 Rohingya in a water tank and
some of those were children.
Extremist Buddhist groups on
the other hand continue to spread hatred of Muslims, by traveling the
countryside with motorbikes.
These are actual human beings and
just because they are living in a remote part of the world, or simply because
they are from a different religion, does not change the fact that these are
innocent civilians. They are not statistics; they are someone’s mother, father,
husband, child, or wife. Yet, they face isolation and are left to deal
with their pain alone.
So what can be done to put an
end to these horrible scenes?
First of all, the Myanmar
government and the Buddhist majority must overcome their irrational fear of
being taken over by Muslims. The abhorrent human rights violations of the
Rohingya should be immediately stopped and they should be treated as human
beings.
It is known that Buddhists are
peaceful people by nature. A national campaign targeting both sides, appealing
to their Islamic and Buddhist background, as both are based on principles of
love and forgiveness, can help overcome the resentment. A country-wide
intellectual campaign, educating people about the peaceful moral values of
Muslims, how the true Islam preaches love and compassion for all, and how the
different ethnical groups can harmoniously co-exist with examples from the past
could help move on to a more peaceful stage for the country.
The UN, the EU and the USA and
others keep issuing statements explaining how concerned they are with the
situation, but it is obviously not enough. And more importantly, Muslim
countries should put an end to their embarrassing silence and attitude of
general indifference. Without further ado, they should come together, form an
alliance and union of love, cooperation and peace to help and defend the rights
of the oppressed, wherever or whoever they might be. No economic concern,
material interest or past hostility can be more important than the opportunity
to help people in need.
The writer has authored more than 300 books translated in 73
languages on politics, religion and science. He may be followed at @Harun_Yahya
and www.harunyahya.com.
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