NEW YORK – UN human rights experts have called on Burma to protect
Rohingya Muslims after days of deadly sectarian clashes with the
Buddhist majority, warning the government against using the violence to
remove the minority from the country.
"The Rohingya constitute a
minority that must be protected according to international minority
rights standards," Rita Izsak, UN independent expert on minority issues,
was quoted as saying by Reuters.
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| UN experts have called for the protection of Rohingya Muslims in Burma |
"The Government must take steps
to review relevant laws and procedures to provide equal access by the
Rohingya community to citizenship and promote dialogue and
reconciliation between communities."
At least 89 people have been killed in clashes between Buddhists and
Rohingya Muslims in the western state of Rakhine in the past ten days.
Both
Rohingyas and Buddhists say the attacks were initiated by Buddhist
outsiders who torched homes one morning and killed three people,
including an elderly woman who was unable to flee.
The violence
forced nearly 29,000 people to flee their homes, more than 97 percent of
homes are Rohingya Muslims, according to the UN.
Many now live in
camps, joining 75,000 mostly Rohingya displaced in June after a
previous explosion of sectarian violence in June that killed at least 80
people.
"The government has an obligation to protect all of those
affected by recent violence, including the Muslim Rohingya community
which is particularly vulnerable, to guarantee their safety and respond
urgently to their needs, including shelter, food and medical care,"
Izsak said.
"It must act rapidly to ensure that this situation
does not deteriorate leading to further loss of life and displacement of
communities."
Human rights groups have accused Burmese police and
troops of disproportionate use of force and arrests of Rohingyas in the
wake of the riots.
Human Rights Watch has accused Burmese
security forces of targeting Rohingya Muslims with killing, rape and
arrest following the unrest.
Stateless Minority
The
UN experts have warned the Burmese government against using the recent
bout of violence as a pretext to remove the Rohingya Muslims from the
country.
"This situation must not become an opportunity to
permanently remove an unwelcome community," Tomas Ojea Quintana, UN
special rapporteur on Burma, said.
He voiced deep concern about
the assertion of the government and others that the Rohingya are illegal
immigrants and stateless persons.
"If the country is to be
successful in the process of democratic transition, it must be bold in
addressing the human rights challenges that exist," Ojea Quintana said.
"In
the case of Rakhine State, this involves addressing the long-standing
endemic discrimination against the Rohingya community that exists within
sections of local and national government as well as society at large."
Burma’s
Buddhist-majority government regards the estimated 800,000 Rohingyas in
the country as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
They have been
denied citizenship rights since an amendment to the citizenship laws in
1982 and are treated as illegal immigrants in their own home.
The United Nations calls Rohingya Muslims "virtually friendless in Burma".
Neighboring
countries have also been hostile to Rohingya Muslims, including
Bangladesh, which has refused to grant Rohingyas refugee status since
1992.
The UN refugee agency estimates that 6,000 people are stranded on boats or on islets along Burma’s western coast.
"We
are appealing to neighboring countries, Bangladesh being very much one
of them, to keep borders open,” UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards told a
news briefing on Tuesday.
“It is clearly important that people do have access to safe haven.” [onislam.net ]



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