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By the time the world stands up Myanmar will have gotten rid of all Rohingya

By the time the world stands up Myanmar will have gotten rid of all their trash & problems & will be a peaceful nation without any radical elements.


Have you not been paying attention turd?

Myanmar has been at war since indepenedence. Right now it is fighting nearly every other ethnicity that makes up the shambles of a "country" called Myanmar.
 
Then why is Banglar Bir flooding this and other threads with topics asking the world to be responsible?
Jeez,says a moron, depicting two two 'Star and Stripes",are you a KKK member or belong to a gun trotting Motor bike Chain Gang,smoking Crack/Hybrid Weed?
A real nutty dimwit who is unaware of his own government's position on this particular issue,read the threads as under:
a. https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/u-s-threatens-to-punish-myanmar-over-treatment-of-rohingya.524826/
b.https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/us-considering-sanctions-over-myanmar-rohingya-crisis.524862/
Anyways,as you can read and write,you are neither,nothing but a False Flagger,trying to prove that you are a real Macho White Caucasian male,whose role model is Hither or a Burmese 969 blood thirsty Monk in Orange robe.
By the way, there are a thousand of other very knowledgeable threads here in PDF, what brings you here?
Interesting indeed.
Please takeitwith you and Adios Amigos.
 
12:00 AM, October 25, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 03:52 AM, October 25, 2017
The fastest growing refugee crisis
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On August 25 this year, hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas started fleeing military operations in Myanmar’s Rakhine State and crossing the border to take shelter in Bangladesh. And the exodus continues. So far, there is no visible progress in the repatriation process.

With the Rohingyas streaming into Bangladesh fleeing a brutal crackdown in Myanmar's Rakhine State, the UN rights body chief denounced the atrocities as “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing”. There have been multiple reports of security forces and local vigilantes burning Rohingya villages, shooting unarmed civilians and raping women.

Myanmar's de facto leader Suu Kyi and the military keep facing the condemnation of the global community amid calls for an end to the violence against one of the most persecuted minority groups in the world. The Bangladesh government and the local community in Cox's Bazar bordering Rakhine State have been widely praised for the response to the unprecedented influx, especially for keeping the border open. However, a lot of challenges lie ahead as the repatriation of the refugees doesn't look like something that's going to happen anytime soon.
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“Bangladesh is not a rich country ... but if we can feed 160 million people, another 500 or 700,000 people, we can do it."
PRIME MINISTER SHEIKH HASINA

“As we witness the unfolding horror we pray for you [Suu Kyi] to be courageous and resilient again... for you to speak out for justice, human rights and the unity of your people."
ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU

“The situation has spiralled into the world's fastest developing refugee emergency, a humanitarian and human rights nightmare."
UN SECRETARY GENERAL ANTONIO GUTERRES
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Are you guys not a part of the OIC or the Muslim NATO I read about here- what is their stance on accepting these refugees into their nations?

Don’t suggest something which is so stupid to do

OIC nations are not here to aid the ethnic cleansing of Moslems . The Royingas are natives of Myanmar are not to be sent to Peshawar or Istanbul .
 
Myanmar Red Cross chief: Driven by fear, Rohingyas keep fleeing Myanmar
Reuters
Published at 06:12 PM October 26, 2017
Last updated at 06:35 PM October 26, 2017
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In Rakhine, people are still on the move, stranded on beaches or trying to return home. RedCross helps with food, water & health services. Inset- Fabrizio Carboni TWITTER
Myanmar has blocked humanitarian agencies apart from Red Cross organisations from accessing the northern part of Rakhine state, where the conflict worsened after Rohingya insurgents attacked 30 security posts on August 25
The thousands of Rohingya thronging the desolate beach had no food or water, except what the Red Cross gives them, and there was no shelter from the tropical sun and rain, yet fear of “tomorrow” has persuaded them to abandon their homes.

Fabrizio Carboni, the top International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) official in Myanmar, described the plight of some 5,OOO people who had made their way to the mouth of the Naf river that divides Buddhist Myanmar from secular Bangladesh.

He said some had been there as long as a month, unable to afford to pay fishermen to take them to Bangladesh, where most of their fellow Rohingyas have fled to escape the ethnic violence that erupted in Myanmar’s Rakhine state two months ago.

“What I can just tell them is a beach is not a place where you live,” Carboni said on Thursday, a day after visiting this stretch on the frontline of an unfolding humanitarian crisis.

Myanmar has blocked humanitarian agencies apart from Red Cross organisations from accessing the northern part of Rakhine state, where the conflict worsened after Rohingya insurgents attacked 30 security posts on August 25.

Many of the 600,000 stateless Rohingyas who have fled Myanmar say they were driven out by a brutal military counter-offensive. The United Nations has called it a campaign of “ethnic cleansing”, and Myanmar soldiers have been accused of rape, killings and arson.

Myanmar’s de facto leader, Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, has said the refugees can return, but thousands have continued to arrive in Bangladesh.

“When you decide to leave everything and go it’s because, rightly or not, you believe that tomorrow will be worse than today where you are staying,” Carboni told Reuters in Sittwe, the capital of Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

The stranded people weighed up their access to basic services, inter-communal relations and security before deciding to flee, he said.

“Probably it’s a lack of trust for the future where they are. I don’t think we are in a moment now where there’s a specific event triggering movement. We are in another phase,” he added.

The Red Cross, which has about 200 personnel working in northern Rakhine, provided plastic sheets, food and water to the people on the beach.

Prior to the attacks on security posts in August, several groups had hundreds of staff and volunteers working in the area, but the government has restricted the movement of aid workers after accusing some groups of aiding Rohingya insurgents.
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Fabrizio Carboni @FCarboniICRC
Traveling along the zero line on Myanmar side to help thousands of people stranded on the beach exhausted, ready to cross into Bangladesh

Ethnic Rakhine Buddhists, who accuse aid groups of favouring Muslims, on Wednesday blocked Relief International staff from visiting a camp for Muslims displaced in earlier violence.

Protesters threw petrol bombs to try to block a Red Cross aid shipment in an incident on September 20.

Carboni said the Red Cross organisations could not be the only ones working in northern Rakhine “for the long run”, but said their ability to reach people was ramping up. Food had reached 40,000 people by Monday, and at least 5,000 households would get food in the next week, he said.

“In our dialogue with the government, we were always very clear, saying we will do our best and more to reach as many people as possible,” said Carboni.

“Now there is a need for the government to re-engage with the rest of the humanitarian community, and find an acceptable way for the people to receive the assistance they need.”
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/s...f-driven-fear-rohingyas-keep-fleeing-myanmar/
 
Ignore the Rohingya at our peril
www.thestateless.com/2017/11/ignore-the-rohingya-at-our-peril.html
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Rohingya refugees disembark from a boat on September 13, on the Bangladeshi side of the Naf River.
By Yvonne Bohwongprasert, Bangkok Post

It was not just human rights groups that were let down last week when Asean leaders invoked their principle of non-interference in each other’s internal affairs and skirted around the ongoing mass exodus of persecuted Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar.

At their summit in Manila, the leaders set aside an issue that some humanitarian agencies have described as genocide and ethnic cleansing. Not only is this a huge disappointment to humanity, it also could give rise to further unrest.

The final chairman’s statement was a typically Asean masterpiece of meaninglessness: “They expressed support to the Myanmar Government in its efforts to bring peace, stability, rule of law and to promote harmony and reconciliation between the various communities,” it said.

When entire families are burned to death in their homes, mothers, wives and daughters raped and killed, it is human instinct to fight back. Since the Myanmar army crackdown began in August following a militant attack that killed nine police officers, the Rohingya have been driven out in worse fashion than cattle. The resulting humanitarian emergency is on full view in the squalid refugee camps that are home to 600,000 people at Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh.

Asean must keep in mind that such camps are often a prime breeding ground for extremists, as we have seen many countries that are experiencing political, religious and ethnic strife.

Not a lot is known about the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), which claimed responsibility for the August attacks. There have been reports of Pakistani training and support, but actual links to any Islamist groups have not been proved. Though the militants are no match for the mighty Tatmadaw today, there is no telling what tomorrow will bring if people in power continue to look the other way.

This is why I believe Asean leaders can no longer put this mater on the back burner by saying it is Myanmar’s internal problem. The huge scale of the exodus has made it the region’s problem, and the faster our leaders realise that, the better for peace.

I base this assumption on what a reliable Rohingya source told me about the possibility of more people joining extremist groups if the world continues to ignore their plight.

“We are broken people,” he began. “For decades we have been residing in a climate of trepidation. When the systematic killings of my people started, we saw our loved ones mercilessly murdered in front of us in cold blood.

“Rohingya people do not know how to fight back because we have lived in fear of the Tatmadaw all our lives. So if we have outsiders come and tell us that they will help us to stand up to our aggressors, in other words, take up arms, I feel a sense of liberation. … As a father, I will do anything to see my child has food to eat. Yes, even if it means to take up arms.”

Reflecting on the need for Myanmar’s neighbours to be the voice of the voiceless, he said: “If you see a fire in the house of your neighbour, wouldn’t you feel it your responsibility to help put it out? If you decide not to, it will be at the risk of getting your own house burned down.”

Asean leaders have to look beyond business gains and political ties, because addressing this humanitarian emergency definitely has an upside. Besides averting possible extremism in the region, they are standing up for what is deemed right and increasing their stature in the world.

Asean and its allies have to come together and deliver a united ultimatum to the Myanmar government to expeditiously cease all atrocities in Rakhine state. They must send Nay Pyi Daw a clear message that diplomacy has its limits, and when it comes to human life there is no compromise. Skirting issues that involve the lives of an entire race is a no-no.

Myanmar is opening for business, and everyone wants in. In an ethical climate where greasing palms is the shabby norm, it is time for leaders to show today’s generation how cool it is to do business according to the books.

Asean leaders also should keep in mind that they have sworn to uphold three pillars of regional stability: political and security, economic, and socio-cultural. The Rohingya crisis potentially threatens all three.

They may have ignored this duty in Manila, but it is not too late for them to change.
http://www.thestateless.com/2017/11/ignore-the-rohingya-at-our-peril.html
 

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