Posted: 26 Feb 2013 05:03 AM PST
Mayu Press:
February 26th, 2013
By Syed Neaz Ahmad
Dhaka: THEY are thought to be the
world’s most persecuted refugees. It is also argued that they are one of
the most forgotten too. In Jeddah prison I saw and met hundreds of
inmates from Burma. Thousands of Burmese Muslims from Arakan – often
called Rohingyas – were offered a safe haven in Saudi Arabia by King
Faisal but with the change in rulers in Saudi Arabia the rules underwent
a change too. A permanent abode of peace that was offered to these
uprooted Arakanese is now nothing less than a chamber of horrors.
There are some three thousand families
of Burmese Muslims in Makkah and Jeddah prisons awaiting their
deportation. Women and children are held in separate prisons nearby. The
only contact the men have with their wives and children is through
mobile phones.But the interesting question is: Where will they be sent?
Burma (Myanmar) doesn’t want them. Bangladesh with a large population,
porous border and poor economy doesn’t have the inclination or the
ability to handle a refugee population of this size. The Rohingya
refugees in Bangladesh are having a rough time as it is. Pakistan’s
offer to accept part of the Rohingyas – awaiting deportation in Saudi
prisons – is seen as mere a diplomatic exercise. Against the background
of Islamabad’s treatment of some 300,000 stranded Pakistanis – living a
miserable life in camps in Bangladesh – senior Rohingya inmates look at
Pakistani overture with suspicion.But who are these people called
Burmese Muslims, Arakanese or Rohingyas? The people who call themselves
Rohingyas are the Muslims of the Mayu Frontier area, present-day
Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships of Arakan (Rakhine) State, a province
isolated in the western part of the country across the river Naf which
forms the boundary between Myanmar and Bangladesh.After Myanmar had
gained independence, a concentration of nearly ninety per cent of the
area’s population – of Islamic faith formed an ethnic and religious
minority group on the western fringe of the republic. In the beginning
they favoured a policy of joining Pakistan. This policy faded away when
they could not gain support from the government of Pakistan. Later they
began to call for the establishment of an autonomous region
instead.Their insistence to call themselves ‘the Muslims of Arakan’ and
adoption of Urdu as their national language indicated their inclination
towards the sense of collective identity that the Muslims of Indian
subcontinent showed before the partition of India (Department of Defence
Service Archives, Rangoon: CD 1016/10/11).
In June 1951 All-Arakan Muslim
Conference was held in village Alethangyaw, and ‘The Charter of the
Constitutional Demands of the Arakani Muslims’ was published. It called
for ‘the balance of power between the Muslims and the Maghs (Arakanese),
two major races of Arakan.’ The demand of the charter read: North
Arakan should be immediately formed a free Muslim State as equal
constituent Member of the Union of Burma like the Shan State, the
Karenni State, the Chin Hills, and the Kachin Zone with its own Militia,
Police and Security Forces under the General Command of the Union
(Department of the Defence Service Archives, Rangoon: DR 1016/10/13).
It is noteworthy that in the charter
these peoples are mentioned as the Muslims of Arakan and not Rohingyas.
The word ‘Rohingya’, it is claimed, was first suggested by Abdul Gaffar,
an MP from Buthidaung, in his article ‘The Sudeten Muslims’,
During his campaign for the 1960
elections, Myanmar Prime Minister U Nu promised statehood for Arakanese
and Mon people. When he came to power the plans for the formation of the
Arakan and Mon states were forgotten. Naturally, the Muslim members of
parliament from Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships denounced the plan and
called for the establishment of a Rohingya state. (SOAS bulletin of
Burma research, 2005)
In 1973, Ne Win’s Revolutionary Council
sought public opinion for drafting a new constitution. The Muslims from
the Mayu Frontier submitted a proposal to the Constitution Commission
for the creation of a separate Muslim state or at least a division for
them (Kyaw Zan Tha, 1995).
‘The proposal was turned down. When
elections were held under the 1974 Constitution the Bengali Muslims from
the Mayu Frontier Area were denied the right to elect their
representatives to the “Pyithu Hlut-taw” (People’s Congress). After the
end of the Independence war in Bangladesh some arms and ammunitions
flowed into the hands of the young Muslim leaders from Mayu Frontier. On
15 July 1972 a congress of all Rohingya parties was held at the
Bangladeshi border to call for the Rohingya National Liberation’ (Mya
Win, 1992).
Myanmar’s successive military regimes
persisted in a policy of denying citizenship to most Bengalis,
especially in the frontier area. They stubbornly grasped the 1982
Citizenship Law that allowed only the ethnic groups who had lived in
Burma before the First Anglo-Burmese War that began in 1824 as the
citizens of the country. By this law those Muslims had been treated as
aliens in the land they have inhabited for more than a century.
‘According to the 1983 census Muslims
in Arakan constituted 24.3 percent and they were categorized as
Bangladeshi, while the Arakanese Buddhists formed 67.8 percent of the
population of the Arakan (Rakhine) State’ (Immigration and Manpower
Department 1987:I-14).
‘In the 1988 Democracy movement Muslims
raised the Rohingya issue. Subsequently when the military junta allowed
the registration of the political parties they asked for their parties
to be recognized under the name “Rohingya.” Their demand was turned down
and so they formed the National Democratic Party for Human rights
(NDPHR) that won in four constituencies in 1990 elections – eleven
candidates of the Arakan League for Democracy (ALD) were elected to the
legislature. However, the Elections Commission abolished both the ALD
and the NDPHR in 1991. Some of the party members had to go into exile.’
In 1978 the Burmese junta created a
situation for the Arakanese Muslims that forced them to leave their
country for safety elsewhere. However, those who crossed over to East
Pakistan or Thailand were never considered as welcome visitors. The
Myanmar government has consistently refused to recognise the Rohingyas
as citizens, who have been forced to flee their homeland since 1978 – to
neighbouring Thailand and as far as Japan.
According to Amnesty International, in
1978 over 200,000 Rohingyas fled to Bangladesh, following the Burmese
army’s Operation Nagamin. Most – it is claimed by Yangon – were
eventually repatriated, but around 15,000 refused to return. In 1991, a
second wave of about a quarter of a million Rohingyas fled Myanmar to
Bangladesh
The Malaysianinsider.com reports that
in January, shocking news emerged of the mistreatment by Thai security
forces of over a thousand ‘boat people’ travelling from Bangladesh and
Myanmar to Thailand and Malaysia. Most of them were Rohingyas. They
drifted at sea for weeks, without sufficient food and water, after
having been beaten, towed out, and abandoned. The Indian navy rescued
about 400 in different batches; Indonesia rescued a further 391. The
rest were reported missing, presumed dead.
In Bangladesh, it is said that there are over 250,000 Rohingyas, some 35,000 of them in overcrowded camps.
There are a further 13,600 registered
with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Malaysia
(although there are thousands yet unregistered), an estimated 3,000 in
Thailand, and unknown numbers in India.
All of these countries have not
ratified the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, its
1967 Protocol, the 1954 Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless
Persons and the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness.
Most Rohingyas in Asia are considered
irregular migrants. Without official papers, they are often subject to
arrest, detention, punishment for immigration offences and deportation.
Forced to work in the informal labour market, they are often exploited
and cheated.
In Malaysia, where some Rohingyas have
resided since the early 1990s, they continue to be rounded up in
immigration operations, whipped, and handed over to human traffickers on
the Thai-Malaysia border. Some have been deported multiple times; some
have ‘disappeared’ along the way. Around 730,000 remain in Myanmar, most
of whom live in the Arakan state. The State Peace and Development
Council, the military regime that rules Myanmar, continues to disavow
Rohingyas as citizens.
Consequently, the Rohingyas are still
subject to forced labour, forced eviction, and land confiscation. Strict
restrictions are placed on their freedom of movement, freedom to marry,
and freedom to own property. Many who return from abroad have been
imprisoned for years, punished for crossing the border ‘illegally’.
Conditions in the Arakan state continue to deteriorate, increasing the
likelihood of further outflows into neighbouring countries.
The UNHCR has been allowed limited
access inside Burma. The UN agency claims that it has helped more than
200,000 to get better healthcare and some 35,000 children to education.
But this kind of help is merely a drop in the ocean. It’s an irony that
countries in Asia and elsewhere – particularly Muslim countries – have
shown little or no desire to help ease the situation.
The UNHCR spokesman in Asia, Kitty
Mckinsey says: ‘No country has really taken up their cause. Look at the
Palestinians, for example, they have a lot of countries on their side.
The Rohingyas do not have any friends in the world.’
Obviously, an immediate and sympathetic
solution is needed; otherwise, it can plunge Rohingyas into deeper
suffering, cause resistance amongst host societies, and fail at stemming
the onward movement of Rohingyas into the region.
The late King Faisal’s decision to
offer them a permanent abode in Saudi Arabia was a gesture that
reflected his noble approach to the problems faced by Muslims in other
countries. However, later Saudi rulers have found the Burmese Muslims a
thorn in their side. With strict regulation on their employment and
movement within the Kingdom Saudi police find them easy targets for
extortion and torture.
Although Myanmar Muslims have showed
collective political interest for more than five decades since the
country gained independence, their political and cultural rights have
not been recognised. On the contrary, the demand for the recognition of
their rights sounds like a direct challenge to the right of autonomy and
the myth of survival for the Arakanese majority in their homeland.
It is said that there are some 250,000
Burmese Muslims in Saudi Arabia – majority living in Makkah
Al-Mukarramah’s slums Naqqasha and Kudai. They sell vegetables, sweep
streets, work as porters, carpenters, unskilled labour, and those
fortunate enough become drivers.
The correct number of the Rohingya
refugees living in Asian countries – Bangladesh, Pakistan, India,
Thailand, Malaysia, Japan and Saudi Arabia – is anybody’s guess. But
this diaspora of refugees attracts human traffickers. It is not uncommon
for poor Rohingyas to marry off their very young – sometimes underage –
daughters to old and affluent Saudis in the hope of getting ‘official
favours’. But with a high rate of divorce in Saudi Arabia in the Saudi
society this hasn’t worked for many. Rohingya wives of Saudi men are not
easily accepted in the Saudi society and they have to survive – as
second class wives – on the periphery of the social infrastructure.
Those whom I met in Jeddah prisons seem
to have accepted the situation as fait accompli. But it is unfair that
these innocent people be made to suffer in a country which is considered
the citadel of Islam, that houses the two holiest places of worship on
earth and the rulers style themselves as Custodian of the Two Holy
Mosques.
King Abdullah is not only the Custodian
of the Two Holy Mosques, he is also the Custodian of those living in
that country, including Rohingya refugees who were invited by one of his
illustrious predecessors. Will Saudi Arabia live up to its promises and
expectations? Dhaka with friendly ties with the country must impress
upon Riyadh to find an early solution to this thorn in the side of
humanity.
Syed Neaz Ahmad, who taught at Umm
Al-Qura University, Makkah, is a London-based journalist. He writes for
British, Arab & Bangladeshi press. He anchors a chatshow on NTV
Europe. His book on Saudi Arabia, The Kingdom & I is expected to be
published in December 2013.
(The above article – initially a
shorter version written for London Guardian – was published in UNCR’s
Refugees Daily: Refugees Global Press Review, Media Relations and Public
Information Service, UNHCR)
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