
Tuesday 24 July 2012
Decades of discrimination have left the Rohingya Muslims stateless, with Myanmar implementing restrictions on their movement and withholding land rights, education and public services, according to a recent report released by Turkish charity group the Humanitarian Aid Foundation (IHH).
The report, states that Rohingya Muslims, who are seen as foreigners by  nationalist Myanmar leaders and extremist Buddhists and are denied  citizenship by the government because it considers them illegal settlers  from neighboring Bangladesh, do not have the freedom to travel. In  order to travel from one village to another, they have to pay taxes to  the government.
The report underlines that there is a great number of Rohingya Muslims  who are detained, subjected to torture and raped, adding that it was  difficult to accurately determine their identities or numbers.
Serkan Nergis, IHH spokesman, told Today’s Zaman in a phone interview  that the IHH released the report to bring the plight of the Muslims in  Myanmar to international attention. “Muslims in Myanmar have been facing  violence for many years. Thanks to social media, now the world is aware  of their situation. Only by public support and media channels can we  find a solution to this violence,” said Nergis, adding that the clashes  in Myanmar had evolved into massacres.
The first glimmer of violence in Myanmar occurred in June after claims  that three Rohingya Muslims had raped a Buddhist woman. Following the  allegations, extremist Buddhists started killing Muslims living in the  Arakan province.
According to the report, more than 1,000 Rohingya Muslims living in  Myanmar have been killed and more than 90,000 have been left homeless  since the violence started. There are contradictory figures regarding  the death toll of the Muslims in the Arakan province, the location of  the recently escalating violence in the country near Bangladesh. An aid  team from the United Nations, which is the only foreign team that was  allowed to enter the region, has said the death toll was neither as low  as Myanmar’s government had declared nor as high as activists have  claimed.
The report adds that the current state of emergency, which was declared  following the clashes between Buddhists and Muslims, has further  deteriorated the living conditions of Muslims. According to the report,  Rohingya Muslims are not allowed to renovate their mosques or schools  without the permission of the government, adding that anyone caught  renovating these buildings without permission would be sent to jail. The  report also adds that a new mosque or school has not been built in over  20 years.
The report states that Muslim families are obliged to present a family  photo, which should include all the members of the family, to the  government every year. Muslim families have to pay taxes to the  government for each newborn baby or death in the family.
According to the report, Muslims are required to seek permission to  marry and are obliged to pay tax for this permission as well. They are  also not allowed to live in concrete houses but frame houses, the report  states, adding that the Muslims are sentenced to jail if the frame  houses, which belong to the government, are damaged.
In addition, in order to set up a shop, Muslims have to enter into a  partnership with a Buddhist, who does not have to invest any capital but  will have a share of the partnership.
They cannot benefit from the social services provided by the state,  including health services, underlines the report, adding that Muslims do  not have the right to work in government offices.
According to the report, a Muslim who commits an illegal act is not  allowed to defend himself and is sent directly to jail. The report also  underlines that Muslims can be forced to work for Buddhists or the  government without any payment.
(Source: Today’s Zaman)
http://tehrantimes.com/world/99891-ihh-report-outlines-plight-of-rohingya-muslims-in-myanmar/ 
 
 
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