Activists Condemn Burmese Regime’s Treatment of Rohingya Peoples, Call for UN to Act
(Washington, DC) A U.S. based activist group called 
on the United  Nations, Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), 
and countries throughout  the world to publicly condemn the Burmese 
military regime’s treatment  of ethnic minorities in Burma, including 
the Rohingya peoples. News  reports state that the issue is not on the 
agenda of the ASEAN, even  though ASEAN should be “demanding an end to 
persecution of the Rohingya  and all people of Burma.”
“The Burmese regime has forced
 the Rohingya people to flee the  country,” said Jeremy Woodrum, 
co-founder of the U.S. Campaign for  Burma. “This shameless persecution 
must stop, and the international  community should be in the lead in 
demanding an end to persecution of  the Rohingya and all people of 
Burma.”
Regional news 
media have labeled the Rohingya refugees “boat people”  since they are 
fleeing in boats to neighboring countries. Thailand in  particular has 
come under international criticism for refusing to accept  the boat 
people, with many human rights groups accusing the Thai  authorities of 
towing the boats without oars or engines out to sea and  leaving up to 
1,000 Rohingya with grossly inadequate food and water to  die.
The Rohingya people have been 
regime targets of brutal persecution  for many years. The Rohingya, who 
are Muslim, live mostly in Burma’s  Arakan State close to the Bangladesh
 border. Regime persecution has  depopulated much of Arakan state of the
 Rohingya, except for the  Maungdaw and Buthidaung Townships that border
 Bangladesh.  Approximately  300,000 Rohingya have fled from Burma.
In addition to general 
oppression and brutality faced by other  targeted border minorities, the
 regime directs abuses specific to the  Rohingya, including denial of 
citizenship, severely restricted travel,  religious persecution, 
population control measures through limiting  marriage permits and birth
 restrictions, and the construction of “model  villages” in which 
predominantly Muslim villages are forcefully evicted  and repopulated by
 Buddhists and others of Burman ethnicity.
Arakan State hosts the largest natural gas reserves 
discovered in SE  Asia. The current ruling regime has been developing 
international energy  and other economic projects in Arakan State.
Many of Burma’s neighbor 
countries have supported natural resource  extraction projects through 
Burma’s regime, while defending the regime  from international pressure 
related to human rights abuses.
As natural resource extraction increases in Arakan 
State, so do the  reports of human rights abuse by the regime. The 
long-standing  persecution of the Rohingya population has accelerated in
 the last  several years, leading to increased high-risk flight. This 
effort to  escape is further triggered by violence, starvation and 
disease induced  by the Burmese regime.
Since 1994, Bangladesh has not allowed the UN High 
Commissioner for  Refugees to give refugee status to the Rohingya. 
Instead, the  Bangladeshi government has mischaracterized the refugees 
as “economic  migrants”.
In an encouraging sign, Indonesia has said it will allow
 the United  Nations High Commissioner for Refugees access to the 
Rohingya refugees  that arrived on Indonesian shores.
USCB called on the ten 
countries of the Association of Southeast  Asian Nations to urgently 
address the persecution of the Rohingya at  their upcoming summit in 
Thailand.
“ASEAN 
should not ignore the Rohingya, who are essentially  stateless,” added 
Woodrum. “But, this should not be left to ASEAN alone.  The United 
Nations should take an active role in ending persecution  against the 
Rohingya, since many countries in ASEAN defend the Burmese  military 
regime from international action related to persecution and  human 
rights abuses.”
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