Who Are the Rohingya and Why Are They Fleeing Myanmar?
Around 1,600 refugees from Myanmar and Bangladesh were rescued off the coast of Indonesia on Sunday and detained in Malaysia on Monday.
Malaysian officials said Monday that 1,081 Bangladeshi and
Rohingya refugees landed on the country’s Langkawi Island. On Sunday,
600 “sad, tired and distressed”
migrants were stranded off the coast of the Indonesian province of
Aceh. On Monday, another 400 were found aboard a ship, the BBC reports.
Hundreds of those people are believed to be Rohingya, the
ethnic Muslim minority in Myanmar who for decades have faced
discrimination and persecution in the majority-Buddhist country. The
government of Myanmar considers the country’s approximately 1.33 million
Rohingya illegal settlers, and the United Nations classifies them as one of the most persecuted refugee groups in the world.
On her visit to the country earlier this year, Yanghee Lee,
the U.N. special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, saw “no
improvement” in the way the Rohingya were being treated.
“The conditions in Muslim [internally displaced person]
camps are abysmal, and I received heartbreaking testimonies from
Rohingya people telling me they had only two options: stay and die or
leave by boat,” she said in a statement.
Malaysia and Indonesia are both majority-Muslim countries.
Between January and March this year, around 25,000 Rohingya and Bangladeshis boarded boats run by smugglers, twice as many as in the same period in 2014,
according to the U.N. refugee agency. Thailand is the usual destination
for the migrant boats, but a recent crackdown on human trafficking
means the smugglers have had to set their sights elsewhere, Reuters reports.
Between 1826 and 1948, the Rohingya were brought from India
by the British during their colonial rule to work in Myanmar. Since
then, their origin has been disputed, with some believing they hail from
Bangladesh and others saying they came from Rakhine state in
southeastern Myanmar.
Myanmar’s president, Thein Sein, denies there have been human rights abuses
against the Rohingya, calling such reports “pure fabrication.” He also
denies that the Rohingya are a people and refers to them as “Bengalis.”
Calling the Rohingya “Bengali” is “a discriminatory, xenophobic way of
erroneously implying that Rohingya are illegal immigrants from
Bangladesh,” says the U.S. Campaign for Burma,
a Washington-based nonprofit. Sein has called on the U.N. to facilitate
the deportation of the Rohingya to other countries, but the U.N. rejected the proposal.
Last year, Myanmar unveiled a controversial plan
offering Rohingya citizenship if they changed their ethnicity to
Bangladeshi in origin. For the Rohingya, calling themselves “Bengali”
implies they are illegally in the country, which most of them reject.
In 1982, the Rohingya were stripped of their citizenship by
the government of Myanmar, then known as Burma. The Burma Citizenship
Law also restricted their access to education, services and freedom of
movement, and allowed property to be taken arbitrarily. More than 140,000 Rohingya
live in internally displaced persons camps around Sittwe, the capital
of Rakhine state, in southwest Myanmar, where they are entirely
dependent on international assistance, Human Rights Watch said in 2014.
More than 200,000 Rohingya refugees live in Bangladesh, according to Refugees International. They are effectively stateless.
Advocates fear violence and discrimination against the
Rohingya is escalating, fueling a surge in treacherous boat journeys.
Last year, more than 40 Rohingya were massacred
in the village of Du Chee Yar Tan by local men, the U.N. confirmed.
Among the findings were 10 severed heads in a water tank, including
those of children.
Earlier this month, dozens of bodies were discovered in smugglers’ camps in Thailand. Many of the victims were believed to be Rohingya.
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