Nadia Shabir
The Global Peace and Unity
(GPU) conference took place in London from November 23-24, 2013 at the
renowned landmark arena ExCel exhibition centre. GPU invited speakers from the
human rights field to speak on current human rights development in the world and
to highlight strategies that contribute to immediate or progressive realization
of human rights.
The GPU Conference differs from the other peace conferences in
that it does not just provide a platform for activists; it also celebrates the
contributions people have made to peace over the years. The GPU international
charity awards 2013 celebrated the steps organizations and different NGOs are
taking to prevent abuse of the state monopoly on violence across the world.
This year, the theme of Global Peace and Unity was ‘Freedom for
all’. Aside from highlighting conflicts and struggles in the Middle East, GPU
highlighted Rohingya Muslims’ human rights situation in Myanmar. Burma has had
a long history of wars, civil strife, corruption and ethnic divisions. However,
since 2012, the human rights situation in Burma has deteriorated considerably
with clashes between Rohingya Muslims and Buddhist monks in the Western Myanmar
state of Rakhine. In May 2012, the rape and murder of an ethnic Rakhine woman
by a three Muslims youths near her village Tha Pri Chaung further fueled the
tension between these two groups, the outcome being Muslim villages burnt to
the ground and thousands of Rohingya Muslims being displaced. According to the
UN, Rohingyas are one of the world’s most persecuted minorities. The
government’s continuous attempt for the past 10 years to suppress 135 ethnic
minorities has resulted in 530,000 displaced people and the destruction of
3,200 villages in Eastern Burma. Over 2,000 Burmese have been forced to seek
refuge in neighboring Thailand.
Toonari Post met Dr. Waqar Uddin, Director of Arakan Rohingya
Union (ARU) in London on November 23, 2013 to discuss the current Human Rights
situation in Burma regarding Rohingya Muslims. Dr Waqar Uddin has dedicated his
life to this cause and to bring attention to the plight and suffering of the
Rohingya community of Myanmar.
Toonari Post (TP): Please tell us about the current situation in Myanmar.
Dr Waqar Uddin (DWU): The current situation in Myanmar has worsened dramatically due
to the conflict of the past year. Since June of last year there have been
Rohingiyas set on fire by Buddhist mobs and monks and so many of Muslim
families and villages have been burnt. There was carnage, violence and dozens
were killed. Due to the ongoing civil strife and tension, there have been
130,000 Internally Displaced People (IDP) in Rakhine state and all of them are
Muslims. These people were driven out of their homeland and have been subjected
to torture and the total denial of their rights and citizenship within Myanmar.
Rohingyas are a stateless Muslim minority.
TP: Please tell us more
about your organization Arakan Rohingiya Union (ARU).
DWU: Rohingya Union is a
global confederation and we are an organization of 61 different Rohingya
organizations worldwide and that includes five organizations from inside
Myanmar. I am a Director General of ARU and I have been elected for the seven
year term. I am running this organization under Secretariat and the Secretariat
has a Director General and we have 11 different departments with chair person
and teams of people running each department.
TP: How did you become
involved in Arakan Rohingiya Union, and do you have a background in human
rights?
DWU: By profession I am
a scientist, I am a micro biologist. I have been involved in the Rohingya issue
for several years now, working with the State Department to highlight the
seriousness of plight of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. In 2010 OIC the Organization
of Islamic Corporation from Jeddah felt that all Rohingiyas, Rohingya
organizations and parties need to come together and form a union for
confederation and for elective vote.
At that time I was running BRANA. I am a founder of BRANA and was
a Chairman of BRANA. BRANA is Burmese Rohingiya Association of North America.
It was formed in 2010, and is an advocacy organization. I was trying to work
with the US senate, US state of Department, Canadian government, and various
NGOs on issues facing the Rohingya people in Burma. Therefore, we are a part of
those 61 organizations and that’s how we got involved with ARU. I was elected
by the members to lead the organization and that explains my involvement with
ARU. The OIC is backing us now with its 57 Muslim member states, which
originally formed and founded ARU, a real legitimate Rohingya organization that
is representing Rohingya people and their interests.
The OIC is very active in working with ARU and Rohingya issues and
last week they went to Myanmar as a seven Foreign Ministry delegation to
discuss the plight and suffering of Rohingya Muslims. There is a forming
relationship between Burmese government and the OIC; therefore as you can see
ARU is instrumental behind all these activities of OIC.
TP: You have spoken
about the international community’s response to the Rohingya conflict but tell
us what Muslim communities and nations have done to help de-escalate the
conflict in Myanmar and to help the Rohingya Muslims?
DWU: This is a very good
question; the Muslim nations’ effort has been tremendous and came from
different channels. The main response came from OIC and its 57 members of
Muslim states. On the public level there has been a tremendous effort by Muslim
organizations, NGOs and aid organizations, and countries like Indonesia,
Malaysia also have been very active in Rohingya Muslim issue.
The community here in the UK also stepped forward to offer their
help and support and asked us ‘what can we do for you’? SO I feel that on
public, international and on governmental level the message has gone out and
more and more countries and Muslims across the world are now becoming aware of
this Rohingya situation. Years ago even in Burma the term Rohingya was foreign,
there was a lack of understanding onto what Rohingya is and who Rohingya
Muslims are. I feel getting this message across to masses has been a tremendous
achievement by ARU so far.
TP: We have seen scores
of massacres and genocides in the 21st century, intervention came too late and
thousands of lives were lost in Bosnia, Chechnya, Uganda, and Rwanda to name a
few, do you think an intervention by the international community came at the
right time in Burma?
DWU: It was little bit
late, we lost thousands of lives but we didn’t lose hundred thousands of lives,
so it could have been far worst. But it would have been better if local,
national, international and Muslim community had gotten involved five years
ago. That would have saved more lives. Muslim Rohingyas have experienced
discrimination, ethnic cleansing and marginalization since 1962. Racism and
marginalization is like a cancer that has been eating away the Rohingya
community slowly since 1962. People have been leaving the country and faced
systematic discrimination. In June of 2012, things exploded and once the news
got out via international and social media, we got a response from the
international community. Sadly this awareness came with the price of killings
of thousands of Rohingya Muslims.
Nonetheless it is not too late, the International community has
stepped in and in about right time.
TP: Please tell us about the aftermath
of the conflict and how this has impacted on Rohingya Muslims, IDPs and
Refugees?
DWU: The past conflict
has brought pain and sorrow. The pain is enormous for these people, their
families, children, women and elderly. The psychological impact of conflict is
huge. Since last year thousands of Rohingyas got onto boats to flee Burma,
going across the Indian Ocean to cross into Bangladesh, Malaysia and Indonesia.
In these countries, they have been placed in refugee camps with not enough food
and medical care. This adjustment to a new reality has been painful for these
people. It is indescribable what they are going through. Among the most painful
consequences of this forced migration is accepting the reality of the loved
ones they have lost, and left behind. Even now you will find boats floating the
Indian Ocean, people desperately trying to get to Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka
and India. This migration of the Rohingya on boats is one of the biggest
movements of recent times.
TP: What message will you be bringing
from ARU to thousands of people who will be watching you live at the GPU?
DWU: My message to the
community here in this large event is to acknowledge the situation of the
Rohingya and to come together to encourage the international community to step
up their efforts to help the Rohingya Muslims. I would also like to request the
guest speakers in this event to get involved with their governments, with their
ministries and their NGOs to step up their efforts until Rohingyas get their
rights in their kind of state.
The message is: Please Help Us! Only some parts of story is known, but the width
and the depth of the problem in Rohingya state is enormous, so we want to ask
the community here to convey this message of help to international actors, to
governments and to other ministries.
TP: It looks like your organization is
at the forefront of raising awareness of Rohingya Muslims, so please tell us
what you have achieved so far, have you been able to make a difference?
DWU: Thanks to God, our
organization has been able to make so much difference on political and
humanitarian grounds. We have stepped up international co-operation among NGOs,
governments and the latest achievement is the United Nations General Assembly
Resolution where ARU has been instrumental in working with OIC and the European
Union, the Canadian government. Those resolutions came out couple of days ago
regarding Rohingya citizenship, human rights and ethnic rights and this is the
latest land mark achievement of ARU.
Before that we have worked with US State Department personally and
Non-EU Member States to raise the awareness of conflict in Myanmar. ARU has
also been active in human rights research for the United Nations General
Assembly where OIC has a covering mission working with them. We have covered a
high level of international activities including media that has been involved
in various departments and Obama’s visit to Myanmar. We have watched and worked
with the US State Department, staff and government to make Obama’s trip
successful and for him to mention Rohingiyas in his speech in Rangoon has
created an awareness of the Muslim people of the coastal Rakhine state of
western Myanmar.
TP: We always hear about crisis in the
Middle East, the East Coast of Africa and there has been a recent catastrophe
in the Philippines. People often feel confused who to help, what can the
ordinary person do to help the Rohingya situation?
DWU: People throughout
the world can collectively do relief efforts to help Rohingya Muslims,
especially those who are IDPs and refugees. There is a dire need for
humanitarian aid, medicine, clothes, food, blankets, and clean water in order
to prevent further health problems and this can be done through aid
organizations worldwide. One thing which is really important for us is that the
international community should not see this as a separate issue. This is a
global issue, there is a community that is dying, that is being wiped out, so
the message to everyone is to get the message out and help these people.
TP: Regarding the GPU; please tell us
how do you define peace and unity?
DWU: Peace and unity
will be the combined effort; one cannot be achieved without another. It is the
peace that will bring the unity. Peace and unity means working together, coming
together, to deal with the issues collectively and contributing to the cause,
such as the one in Syria, Myanmar, Congo and other countries of the world, to
help the victims and the cause.
TP: How can humanity achieve peace and
unity?
DWU: For humanity to achieve peace and unity, it
will be through building bridges, gaining understanding and coming together.
Source: The Toonari Post - News
Source: The Toonari Post - News
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