Hundreds of Rohingya people
have been killed; tens of thousands were forced from their homes and live as
suffering refugees in Internal Displacement Camps (IDP's) where disease is
rampant and food and shelter are scarce.
"Terrorist" groups are frequently the banter of network news anchors and analysts; yet few in America devote time to the terrorists of Burma who have behaved treacherously toward the Muslim population for a year and a half now, due to old simmering hatreds and a desire among the majority population to live in a Buddhist only country. The Buddhist answer toward their frustration with having to live with Muslims, is most vividly expressed in the "969" movement led by a Buddhist monk named U Wirathu; which propagates false information that in turn damages the fragile existence of Muslims in this country that was locked down under a military junta for so many years. While all Muslims are threatened, the Rohingya Muslim people are at the center of the Buddhist's gun sites.
"Terrorist" groups are frequently the banter of network news anchors and analysts; yet few in America devote time to the terrorists of Burma who have behaved treacherously toward the Muslim population for a year and a half now, due to old simmering hatreds and a desire among the majority population to live in a Buddhist only country. The Buddhist answer toward their frustration with having to live with Muslims, is most vividly expressed in the "969" movement led by a Buddhist monk named U Wirathu; which propagates false information that in turn damages the fragile existence of Muslims in this country that was locked down under a military junta for so many years. While all Muslims are threatened, the Rohingya Muslim people are at the center of the Buddhist's gun sites.
Wirathu is now an abbot in Mandalay's Masoeyein
Monastery, an expansive complex where he leads about 60 monks and has influence
over more than 2,500 residing there. Free from a prison sentence and back in a
place of influential power, he is again preaching hatred and intolerance.
"Many monks are highly influenced by his hateful messages, and are
directly involved in genocidal campaigns against the minority Muslim population
in Myanmar. They are also supported by government agencies at all levels - from
local to central," noted Rohingya Muslim political leader, Dr. Habib
Siddiqui.
The nightmare for Burmese Muslims started a year
ago last July, when Buddhists claimed that one of their women was raped and
murdered by Muslim men. Her ravaged and damaged body was posted online and in
Buddhist press and only a day after this was reported, ten Muslim men in a
completely different part of the country were pulled from a bus and murdered in
broad daylight by a Buddhist mob.
Three young men were arrested for the woman's
murder and they all died in custody. There was no trial, their role in the
woman's death was never proven. There is wide speculation that the woman's
death had nothing to do with any Muslim man, and that it was a set up to spark
the Genocide that has been sweeping Burma, now called Myanmar, ever since.
Hundreds of Rohingya people have been killed;
tens of thousands were forced from their homes and live as suffering refugees
in Internal Displacement Camps (IDP's) where disease is rampant and food and
shelter are scarce.
As these acts of barbarity and government
terrorism have plagued the Rohingyas, Hillary Clinton and Aung San Suu Kyi have
signed business deals and planned the corporation exploitation of this virgin
country in Asia. Neither have raised their voice to end the violence. Suu Kyi
was viewed as a world peace leader prior to this current saga where she sides
with the Buddhist majority, members of which continue their campaign of terror
to eliminate the Rohingya people.
Castaways
The stories about the boat people are
horrendous. Those fortunate enough to reach Bangladesh are given a bag of rice
and a bottle of water and turned around... literally sent back to the sea, and
their deaths in many if not most cases.
In October 2012 Salem-News.com reported:
"After floating for 3 consecutive days with limited to no supplies,
Rohingya boat people from Arakan finally attempted to land near Shamapura
Island of Bangladesh this afternoon.
"But misfortune is following after them and
the Bangladeshi border security forces blocked them from landing on their soil.
After having a long and keen request with tears, when they failed approaching
to the Bangladeshi, they at last drove their boats out toward Maungdaw where
brutal Burmese forces are in standby to prevent the landing and drive out them.
"All the boats are sighted at the middle of Naf River yet as they are unable to land on either side, not in Burma nor Bangladesh."
In the article "Are Rohingyas and Kamans
Less (Than) Human Beings?", M.S. Anwar wrote: "Had Bangladesh wanted
it, they could have solved the problems of Rohingyas long ago and repatriated
the thousands of Rohingyas living in the country by taking the sociopathic
Burmese leaders to international dialogues or international courts for denying
the history of Rohingyas and true history of Arakan. If Bangladesh can do it,
it will be the win-win situation for both Bangladesh and Rohingyas. But
Bangladesh doesn’t do it for the lame hopes of more profits to be gained from
maintaining a good relationship with Burma. So Rohingyas have no choice but to
take perilous sea voyages for wherever they feel and believe they will be given
refuges and breathing spaces. However, all of their hopes of respites and
refuges are but all over soon after their journeys start."
The Rohingya people are also rejected from
other countries with no regard for their humanity. The bottom line is that they
are a stateless people, and their situation is getting worse. Burma is a
country that has lived under military government for a very long time, and this
has impacted educational and social understandings in ways that western people
cannot begin to imagine. Persecution is nothing new in Asia, but the Rohingya
story is off the charts in terms of international Human Rights law violations
and Crimes Against Humanity. The lucrative potential of today's Myanmar is too
much for those with an eye on exploitation to ignore.
Unwanted, punished for being who they are, the Rohingya people are dreading the politics of Myanan Sayadaw U Thaddhamma. He is leading a movement to build hatred toward the Rohingya in a blatant and sickening way that Buddhist people all over the world should stand against. So much for meditation and incense, the Buddhists of Burma have become a Nazi like commodity and there is little outcry from within the Buddhist community, likely because of the associated danger that could become a knife in the back of Muslim sympathizers.
I have personally reported the torture death of
a Rohingya man. This happened inside of a government jail. An expert Human
Rights physician confirmed that the man had literally been tortured to death:
"We do not know his name but we can imagine
how difficult the last weeks of his life were. We do know that this man was
from Anaung Pyin Village, in Ra Tha Taung Township. The government arrested him
after the outbreak of violence. From what we have been told, he was held for
the last part of his life, in Sittwe jai. Here, we are told, the man had been
tortured since his arrest by police and Rakhines; pulled away from whatever
family and friends he may have had, and his life has been something akin to a
horror movie ever since. Through consistent torture and a lack of medication he
passed away on 13th October 2012."
In October of last year, we reported that Dr.
Nora Rowley, a Human Rights Physician who lived in Burma for years, observed
that the violence, "is looking more like Bosnia and true Genocide every
day rather than ethnic cleansing."
In an article just published by The Irrawaddy,
Lawi Weng writes that the 969 movement, led by the Mandalay-based monk U
Wirathu, has become extremely controversial in the past year after launching a
nationwide campaign claiming that Burma’s minority Muslim population is
threatening the Buddhist majority.
"The monks, who are deeply revered in
Burma, have called on Buddhists to shun Muslim communities and buy only goods
from Buddhist-owned shops. The sermons are considered hate speech and have been
linked to outbreaks of Buddhist mob violence against Muslim communities
throughout Burma."
The most recent outbreak of deadly
inter-communal Buddhist mob attacks happened in Thandwe Township last October.
That violence was preceded by sermons organized by the 969 movement. While it
seems hard to deny the connection between the 969 monks and the ethnic tension,
the 969 movement's U Thaddhamma, says the movement’s activities in the region
are not contributing to escalating tensions, adding that the monks were allowed
to travel and spread their message by local authorities.
"We did not hold talks to create any
problem," he said, before claiming that the Muslims had initiated the
inter-communal violence in Burma in the past year. "They were first people
who started the violence. Then, when they were suffered, they blamed our 969
monks," Thaddhamma added.
Often described as Myanmar's Neo-Nazi group,
organizers of 969 claim that the three digits "symbolize the virtues of
the Buddha, Buddhist practices and the Buddhist community."
In an Asian Tribune article, Dr. Habib Siddiqui
explains that the 969 movement was launched by Wirathu, known in Asia as
"The Burmese bin Laden," in 2001, "It draws its inspiration from
fascism and Nazism and is racist, bigotry-ridden and apartheid to the core
calling for boycott of anything Muslim the same way Jews of Germany were
depicted and treated in the 1930s and 1940s until the fall of Hitler."
Wirathu is apparently wising up to the image he
is creating for himself, his movement and all Buddhists, as he conducts his
hatred under that banner. Here are some of the incidents that define this man:
- He launched a campaign to pass legislation on
marriages between Buddhist women and Muslim men that would require the women to
receive prior permission from their parents and authorities and the men to convert
to Buddhism. This is a stark violation of international law.
- As a result of Wirathu's actions in 2001,
several mosques were destroyed by Buddhist monks. The sporadic violence which
included killing of several Muslims and destruction of Muslim properties and
mosques would continue until 2003 when he was arrested.
- Wirathu distributed anti-Muslim pamphlets that
incited communal riots in his birthplace of Kyaukse, a town near Meikhtila. At
least 10 Muslims were killed in Kyaukse by a Buddhist mob, according to a U.S.
State Department report.
- In 2003, the Mandalay-based monk received a 25
year sentence for inciting anti-Muslim hatred, but was released last year under
a general amnesty, far before his release date.
- "We have a slogan: When you eat, eat 969;
when you go, go 969; when you buy, buy 969," Wirathu declared at his
monastery in Mandalay. (Translation: If you're eating, traveling or buying
anything, do it with a Buddhist.) This apartheid 969 creed led to sharp
increase in anti-Muslim violence in Myanmar, especially after the Bamiyan
statues were destroyed by Taliban in March of 2001.
Dr. Siddiqui says it is widely believed by Dr.
Maung Zarni and many other independent researchers that the government of Thein
Sein, "is using Wirathu and his terrorist monks, with wide support within
the Buddhist society, to do what it could not do officially. Thus, the crimes
of Wirathu cannot be separated from those of Thein Sein. They are in
collusion."
The odds of Rohingya people finding justice in
Myanmar seems dismal at best. When leaders like Aung San Suu Kyi fail to raise
their voice, the process becomes daunting.
Wirathu's Buddhist peers in Saffron Revolution
Wirathu's Buddhist peers in Saffron Revolution
U Gambira, aka Nyi Nyi Lwin, led the
"Saffron Revolution" democracy uprising in 2007 that was crushed by
the Burmese military. He told Reuters that if the government was serious to
stop anti-Muslim pogroms, it could do it.
"In the past, they prevented monks from
giving speeches about democracy and politics. This time they don't stop these
incendiary speeches. They are supporting them," he said. "Because
Wirathu is an abbot at a big monastery of about 2,500 monks, no one dares to
speak back to him. The government needs to take action against him."
Dr. Siddiqui said, "Last year in
May-October when Rohingya Muslims were killed in the Arakan state, the Buddhist
monks played major roles not only in inciting violence against them, they
allowed their monasteries to be used as arms depot and also participated
themselves in the slaughter. Government security forces and ultra-racist
Rakhine politicians also participated in such raids. The anti-Muslim pogroms
last year led to the death of hundreds of Muslims and homelessness of nearly
140,000 Muslims in the Rakhine state."
Salem-News.com - Boats with Dying Rohingya Refugees Rejected From Bangladesh Shoreline
Salem-News.com - Are Rohingyas and Kamans Less (Than) Human Beings?
The Irrawaddy - Extremist Monks Hold Talks Throughout Strife-Torn Arakan State
Asian Tribune - Letter from America: Wirathu – the face ofBuddhist Terror
HN/HN
Salem-News.com - Are Rohingyas and Kamans Less (Than) Human Beings?
The Irrawaddy - Extremist Monks Hold Talks Throughout Strife-Torn Arakan State
Asian Tribune - Letter from America: Wirathu – the face ofBuddhist Terror
HN/HN
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