MUSLIM MENACE IN MYANMAR
Dr. Daya Hewapathirane
The
Muslim community associated with Myanmar or former Burma, known as
Rohingya Muslims are not indigenous to Myanmar. They are a relatively
recent migrant community of Myanmar. Most of these Muslims are illicit
immigrants who migrated from Muslim neighborhood regions of Bengal India
during the British colonial period and later from East Pakistan or the
present Bangladesh. The Myanmar government s of the past and present do
not consider Rohingya Muslims as legitimate citizens of Myanmar. The
people of Myanmar consider the Rohingya people as illegal immigrants.
Myanmar’s Muslims account for an estimated 04% of the total Myanmar
population of about 60 million. In 2012, there were about 800,000 Rohingya
Muslims living in Rohang, the western state of Myanmar known officially as Rakhine or Arakan.
THE INDIGENOUS PEOPLE OF BURMA (MYANMAR)
The
indigenous people of Myanmar are ethno-linguistically Sino-Tibetan and
are predominantly Buddhists as opposed to the Rohingya Muslims who are ethno-linguistically related to the Indo-Aryan Bengali people of India and Bangladesh and their religion is Islam. The language spoken by the Rohingya Muslims is different from that of the indigenous people of Myanmar. It is derived from a Indo-Aryan sub-branch of the greater Indo-European language family and is closely related to the Chittagonian language spoken in the southernmost part of the present Bangladesh bordering Myanmar. Therefore, culturally the Rohingya Muslims are quite different to the indigenous people of Myanmar.
ROHANG AND THE RAKKHITA BUDDHIST COMMUNITY
It
was mostly during the British colonial period that these Muslim people
crossed the borders and settled in border regions of Burma,
concentrating largely in Rohang which was also known as Rakhine or
Arakan, located in the immediate neighborhood of Bengal. Their numbers
increased substantially during the British colonial period, and
thereafter. Rakhine State consists of a population of about 3,8 million,
with the indigenous Rakhine people forming the overwhelming majority in
the State, who live mainly in the lowland valleys. Most
of the indigenous people living in Rakhine State adhere to Theravada
Buddhism. In spite of the government rule limiting Muslims to two
children per family, the Muslim population in Myanmar shows an
increasing trend.
According
to historians of Myanmar, the name ‘Rohingya' is of recent origin and
appears to have been created in the1950’s, by the descendants of the
Muslim Bengali people who settled down in the Rohang or Arakan region of
Myanmar. The name Rohingya has not been used or recognized in the Burma
population census conducted by the British in the year 1824. It is also noteworthy that the name Rohingya is not found in any historical source in any language before the 1950’s.
Rohang is an important region of Myanmar inhabited from ancient times by the Rakkhita, Rakkha or Rakhaing people, who belong to the indigenous Buddhist community of Burma. From
historic times, this was a highly respected Burmese community, well
known for the honourable life they led. They were well known for their
contribution to the development and preservation of the national cultural heritage and Buddhist spiritual values. These Rakkhita people had their own language
and their livelihood was strongly based on Buddhist principles. The name of the state Rakhine is derived from the Pali word Rakkhita or Rakkhapura which means "the land of the Rakhasa" or Rakkha or Rakhaing.
There
were striking differences in the customs, traditions and livelihood
patterns of the two communities – the indigenous Burmese Buddhists of
the Arakan region, especially the Rakkhita community and the Muslim
immigrants from Bengal. These cultural incompatibilities and differences
resulted in open conflicts between the two communities, which were well
evident from about the mid 20th century. Soon violence broke out in the Arakan region and the Muslim Rohingyas became a serious threat to the people of Myanmar. Occasional
isolated violence involving Myanmar's majority Buddhist and
minority Muslim communities has occurred for decades, even under the
authoritarian military governments that ruled the country from 1962 to
2011.
BRITISH RESPONSIBLE FOR AGGRAVATION OF THE PROBLEM
According
to Aye Chan, a historian at the Kanda University, communal violence
between the Arakanese or the indigenous Myanmar (Burmese) Buddhists and
the Rohingya Muslims began during World War -II in 1942. The
British were primarily responsible for the aggravation of disharmony
between the Rohingya Muslims and the indigenous people of Myanmar.
During
the World War, when the British were retreating, they took action to
arm Muslim groups in Northern Arakan in order to create a buffer zone
against the Japanese invasion. Furthermore, the
British promised the Muslims living in Burma (Myanmar) at this time,
that if they supported the British during the war, the Muslims will be
given their own "national area" within Burma.
Once
acquiring arms, the Muslim Rohingyas became a serious threat to the
people of Myanmar. They soon began a spree of violence against the
Buddhists of the Arakan region. They began destroying Buddhist villages
in Arakan, using the firearms given to them by the British. In 1942, a major armed confrontation occurred between the Rohingya Muslims and indigenous Arakanese people which led to many casualties on both sides. Rohingya Muslims massacred about 20,000 Arakanese in Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships. In retaliation, about 5,000 Muslims in Minbya and Mrauk-U Townships were killed by the Arakanese.
In the mid 20th
century, Rohingya Muslims living in Arakan organized into several
militant groups. They formed an aggressive movement known as the
Mujahideen movement which was active during the 1947 to 1961 period. There were several Mujahideen uprisings in Arakan. The
aim behind the riots of the Rohingya militant groups was to separate
the northern part of Arakan, or the Muslim populated Mayu frontier
region and create an independent Muslim state for the Rohingya Muslims
and annex it to the newly-formed Muslim East Pakistan as an exclusively
Muslim country.
In 1947, when a new Islamic country of Pakistan
was about to be formed, Rohingya Muslims who had already possessed arms
from the British, wanted to obtain a "national area" for them within
Burma, in accordance to the assurance given to them by the British. They
formed the North Arakan Muslim League and met Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, and requested that Mayu region of Myanmar be annexed to East Pakistan which was about to be formed. Jinnah however, was not in favour of such a move. This did not stop the Rohingya Muslims in their agitation for separation from Myanmar. During the 1960’s and early 1970’s, there were several uprisings which were popularly known as Arakan State Riots. A widespread armed insurgency started with
the formation of a Muslim political party called Jami-a-tul Ulema-e Islam, demanding separation.
The Burmese central government refused to grant a separate Muslim state in the Mayu region and the Muslim militants of Northern Arakan declared jihad on Burma. The Mujahid militants began their insurgent activities in the Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships within the Mayu region that lies on Burma-East Pakistan border, led by a long-term Muslim criminal named Abdul Kassem who was a leader of the Mujahid movement. There was widespread violence in the Arakanese villagers and the Buddhist Arakanese inhabitants of Buthidaung and Maungdaw were forced to leave
their homes. By June 1949, the Mujahid rebels were in possession of all of northern Arakan. In the meantime, the Mujahid extremists encouraged and supported illegal immigration into the Arakan region of thousands of Muslim Bengali people from the over-populated East Pakistan.
CONTAINING MILITARY OPERATIONS OF MUJAHID MILITANTS
When
the rebellion was becoming intensified the Burmese government declared
martial law and took firm action to contain the militants. This led to
the subjugation of the Mujahid insurgency and the Muslim insurgents fled
to the jungles of northern Arakan. Between 1950 and 1954, the Burmese
army launched major military operations against the Mujahid rebels in
Northern Arakan. All major centres of the Mujahids were captured and
several of their leaders were subdued. Towards the end of 1961, most
Mujahids surrendered, but some formed small armed groups and continued
to loot, harass and terrorize the Burmese Buddhists, especially in
remote regions in Northern Arakan.
THE RADICALIST MOVEMENTS (1971-1988)
During Bangladesh Libration War in 1971, the Rohingya Muslim who resided in the Myanmar-Bangladesh border had the opportunity to collect weapons. In 1972, the Rohingya Muslims formed the Rohingya Liberation Party (RLP) with activities based in the jungles of Buthidaung. Military Operation conducted by
the Burmese Army in 1974 led to many Muslim insurgents fleeing to neighboring Bangladesh.
In
March 1978, the Burmese government launched a campaign to check illegal
immigrants residing in Burma. This led to many thousands of Rohingyas in
the Arakan region crossing the border to Bangladesh. Arrests of illegal migrants by the Burmese army created unrest in Arakan and as a result, there was a mass exodus of around 252,000 refugees to Bangladesh.
In late 1982, the Burmese Citizenship Law was introduced and most of the Rohingyas were denied Burmese citizenship. Radical
Rohingya militant group took this opportunity to recruit many Rohingya
Muslims who were occupying the region along the Bangladesh-Burma border.
In the early 1980s, radical Muslims formed the Rohingya Solidarity
Organization (RSO) which soon became the most militant faction among the
Rohingyas on the Burma-Bangladesh border. Using the Islam religious card the RSO was able to obtain various forms of assistance and support
from the Muslim world, including the JeI in Bangladesh and Pakistan,
Gulbuddin Hekmatyar’s Hizb-e-Islami (HeI) in Afghanistan,
Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) in the Indian State of Jammu and Kashmir and the
Angkatan Belia Islam sa-Malaysia (ABIM), and the Islamic Youth
Organization of Malaysia.
In 1991 and 1992, there was forced relocation of Muslims by the government and the creation of new Buddhist settlements in Buthidaung and Maungdaw townships. This provoked another mass exodus of Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh.
CONNECTIONS WITH TALIBAN AND AL-QAEDA (1988-2011)
The military camps of Rohingya Solidarity Organization (RSO) were located in the Cox's Bazaar district
in southern Bangladesh. In 1991, it possessed a large number of
military equipment, including light machine-guns, AK-47 assault rifles,
RPG-2 rocket launchers, claymore mines and explosives. They were
equipped with UK-made 9mm Sterling L2A3 sub-machine guns, M-16 assault
rifles and point-303 rifles. Afghan's Taliban
instructors were associated with RSO camps along the Bangladesh-Burma
border. Many RSO rebels were undergoing training in the Afghan province
of Khost with
Hizb-e-Islami Mujahideen.
The expansion of the RSO in the late 1980s and early 1990s made the Burmese government launch
a massive counter-offensive to clear up the Burma-Bangladesh border. In
December 1991, Burmese troops crossed the border and attacked a
Bangladeshi military outpost. The incident developed into a major crisis
in Bangladesh-Burma relations, and by April 1992, more than 250,000
Rohingya civilians had been forced out of Arakan, western Burma.
In
late 1998, Rohingya Solidarity Organization (RSO) and Arakan Rohingya
Islamic Front (ARIF) combined to form the Rohingya National Council
(RNC) with its own armed wing, gathering the different Rohingya
insurgents into one group. In 2001, they underwent training in Libya and
Afghanistan, in guerrilla warfare and the use of a variety of
explosives and heavy-weapons. They had several meetings with Al-Qaeda representatives.
Throughout 2012 and in 2013, there have been a series of riots and much violence in Northern Arakan in the Rakhine State, between extremist Rohingya Muslims and the indigenous Rakhini or Arakanese people. Muslim fanatics are largely responsible for the outbreak of violence. The 2012 riots began after
a Rakhine teenage girl was brutally raped and cut into pieces by three
Muslim fanatics. This immediately led to an
outrage and retaliation by the Rakhine community. This was followed by
the extremist Muslims resorting to extreme forms of violence, destroying
many villages in their entirety and murdering many innocent people.
Those displaced by these riots exceeded 50, 000. The situation in the Rakhine state remains tense.
In 2013, the worst violence in Myanmar was in Meikhtila city, which resulted in widespread bloodshed and destruction of property, and the displacement
of nearly 10,000 people who were forced out of their homes. A State of
Emergency was declared and the army took control of the city. The
devastation was reminiscent of last year's clashes between ethnic
Rakhine Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya that left hundreds of people dead
and more than 100,000 displaced. The struggle to contain the violence
has become a major challenge to the government. Buddhist
and Muslim communities live in near-total segregation, constantly
fearing more violence. The violence in Meikhtila city began once news
spread that a Muslim man had killed a Buddhist monk. Soon, Buddhist
mobs rampaged through a Muslim neighborhood and the situation quickly
became out of control.
A CURSE TO HUMANITY
Those conversant with global affairs, are aware of the fact that, especially in recent years, Muslims have become a curse to humanity, resorting to violent and unethical means of serving their religious ends, or to ‘resolve’ their obsessive religion-based issues and self-created problems. Peace and harmony in many countries in the West and East, have been impaired greatly owing to unwholesome actions of Muslim religious fanatics.
As
far as Sri Lanka is concerned, Muslim encroachment of traditional
Sinhala Buddhist land and the demolition of historic sites and
archeological remains of Buddhist heritage show the sheer lack of respect for Buddhism and related and cultural heritage of the country that gave them shelter. The situation does not seem too different in Myanmar or Thailand.
There
is clear evidence of disregard and disrespect on the part of most
Muslims, for the Buddhist cultural heritage of our country. There is
evidence of destruction of archeological and historic cultural monuments
and remains, especially in areas inhabited by Muslims. The fundamentals
of ‘Islam’ that are being widely propagated by the Muslims have serious
negative implications as far as the national culture is concerned.
ISLAM AND VIOLENCE
Buddhists
cannot consider Islam as a religion of compassion and peace. Those
professing Islam have been the biggest enemies of Buddhists and Buddhism
throughout history. There are ample historic records which describe
vividly the atrocities committed against millions of Buddhists in
several countries. Their criminality has not subsided in spite of their
living among other religions in different countries.
It
is a well known fact that Buddhism disappeared from India under the
sword of Islam. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the great Indian Buddhist leader said
that there is absolutely no doubt that the fall of Buddhism in India
was due to the invasions of the Musalmans or the adherents of Islam. For
five centuries, from the 13th to 17th centuries,
most parts of India were under Muslim rule. Over 50 million Buddhists
and Hindus were massacred by Islamists in greater India (which in the
past included Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afganistan).
Islam
destroyed Buddhism not only in India but wherever it went. Before the
onslaught of Islam, Buddhism was the religion of almost the whole of
Asia - ancient countries/regions such as Bactria, Parthia, Afghanistan,
Gandhar, Chinese Turkestan, along with Tibet and Inner Mongolia were
Buddhist nations that formed almost the whole of the Asian continent.
Buddhism was the dominant religion of the people of this vast area of
the Asian continent. Islam destroyed and eliminated Buddhism from almost
all these countries.
BANGLADESHI BUDDHISTS
Buddhists
of Bangladesh have been subject to untold violence by Muslims in recent
years. The Chakmas form the community of Buddhists that inhabit the
Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh. Chakma
Buddhist monks were forced to flee their traditional lands due to
Islamic persecution and violence in the early 1990s. Some obtained
Indian citizenships and formed the organization called Peace Campaign Group and are actively focusing on working against human rights violations systematically carried out by Muslims in Bangladesh.
According
to Jumma Buddhists, successive governments of Bangladesh were engaged
in implementing a policy of ethnic cleansing to eradicate the indigenous
Jumma Buddhists. The government has settled more than 400,000 Muslim
settlers in the ancestral lands of Buddhists in the Chittagong Hill
Tract region. This encroachment of land owned and occupied previously by
Buddhists is said to be continuing on a rapid scale even at present. In
addition, more than 100,000 military and paramilitary personnel have
been stationed in the Chittagong Hill Tract making life insecure and
miserable for the Jumma Buddhist community. The region today is crime
prone, characterized by arson, killing, rape, land grabbing, and
destruction of Buddhist temples, extra-judicial arrest and detentions.
Between 1986 to1989 more than
70,000 Jumma Buddhists have fled Bangladesh and sought refuge in the
Tripura state of India.
ARMED STRUGGLE AND PEACE ACCORD
Violence
centering on land issues has been going on in this region since 1978,
when the government decided to settle Muslim people in the Chittagong
Hill Tracts which is land traditionally owned and occupied by Buddhists. Many Buddhists were harassed and were forced to leave their traditional land. Owing
to continued harassment the Buddhists collectively protested and
launched an armed struggle during the early 1980s, demanding full
autonomy for the Chittagong Hill Tracts. This
continued for two decades and an Accord was signed between
the Jumma People’s political party of the Buddhists and Bangladesh
government in December 1997, to withdraw the new settlers and the
military from Chittagong Hill Tract. Expecting
a peaceful situation following the Peace Accord, many indigenous people
who had fled to refugee camps in India during times of violence,
started returning home, only to find their land encroached upon by
Muslims. The Buddhists allege that the Accord was not respected by the government.
BUDDHIST RIGHTS VIOLATED BY MUSLIMS
Thousands of Jumma Buddhist families who were displaced owing to violence have not been resettled as yet, and
the number of poverty-stricken Jumma refugees have increased
substantially. Among them are thousands of children who are deprived of
their education. Human Rights abuses continue to
occur with the military resorting to violence against Buddhists. On 20th
April 1999, the military and Muslim settlers attacked the Jumma
Buddhists at Babuchara bazaar killing and wounding many Jumma Buddhists.
In recent years Muslim extremism and violent tendencies appear to have intensified.
In
the early part of 2010, the Chittagong Hill Tracts region was rocked by
violence, flaring up decades old ethnic-religious tensions, as Muslim
settlers set fire to hundreds of homes of indigenous Buddhists resulting
in many deaths and many injuries. Thousands of Buddhists have been left
homeless. These attacks were meant to forcibly grab land and properties
of Buddhists. This violence was committed in the presence of law
enforcement officers including soldiers who were
Muslims. According to Jumma people, Muslim military personnel have been
involved in gross human rights violations with impunity, in the
Chittagong Hill Tracts for many years. Many indigenous Buddhist people
of affected villages continue to live in hiding, in
dense forests and some have abandoned their ancestral land and had
moved to other villages and are leading desperate lives.
THAI BUDDHISTS
Muslims
are a very small minority settler community in Southern Thailand,
smaller than the Muslim settler community of Sri Lanka. Their objective
is to have a separate country for Muslims in Sothern Thailand. Buddhist
civilians and monks have been frequent targets of Muslim attacks in
Southern Thailand in recent years. In late 2005, Muslims again started
killing Buddhists in Southern Thailand. The bloodshed here could mark a
resurgence of a long-simmering Muslim insurgency and, some officials
fear, fertile ground for Islamic terrorists. More than 500 people were
killed in 2006, in three southern Thai provinces, including attacks
targeting Buddhists in possible bids to drive out non-Muslims.
Authorities
are investigating possible links between these Muslim separatist groups
and Islamic terrorist organizations such as Jemaah Islamiyah, which
seeks a pan-Islamic state in Southeast Asia. It is blamed for attacks
including the 2002 bombing in Bali that claimed 202 lives. Thitinan
Pongsudhirak, an assistant professor of international relations at
Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University says "We have not yet seen
escalation, "but I still think we may be headed from bad to worse." "The
gruesome fashion of beheadings of Buddhists by Muslim assailants ... is
not normal violence," said Pongsudhirak. "It is driven by deep
animosity and hatred."
RISE IN ISLAMIC FUNDAMANTALISM
In
the last few decades, owing to the newfound wealth of oil rich Islamic
countries and massive immigration to the West, Islamic fundamentalism
has been on the rise and the dormant spirit of Jihadism has been
rekindled. This fervor has been translated into upheavals, revolutions and terrorism
, and world peace has been put in jeopardy. Millions of lives are now
in danger. Islam encourages aggressive spirit explicitly. Muslim
believe that he can go to paradise if he kills non Muslims. The Quran
tells Muslims to slay the unbelievers wherever they find them (2:191),
do not befriend them (3:28), fight them and show them harshness (9:123),
and smite their heads (47:4). It prohibits Muslims to
associate with their own brothers and fathers if they are non-believers
(9:23), (3:28).
Buddhists
have been the most victimized and harassed religious community in the
world, owing to actions of Muslims guided by their theistic traditions and beliefs. Throughout the ages the Buddhist religion experienced many calamities. As
far back as in the 10th century, as a result of the Muslim invasion of
what is modern day Afghanistan, Pakistan and India, the Buddhist
religion which formed the basis of life of the people of this part of
the world, was viciously wiped out in an act of virtual genocide.
In
some Asian countries indigenous Buddhist spiritual traditions have been
severely weakened by decades of persecution. Muslim terror and
atrocities have inflicted severe damage to Buddhism in many Asian
countries, some of which were exclusively Buddhist at one stage in their
histories. The destruction of the colossal Afghan Bahmian Buddha
statues is not the first destruction resulting from Muslim
fundamentalism.
In
the last three decades the exclusively Muslim Army of Bangladesh,
motivated by religious fanaticism have caused havoc to Buddhists of
Bangladesh and destroyed many Buddhist shrines and monasteries.
Religious persecution and destruction of places of worship is
commonplace in the Chittagong Hill Tracts ( CHT ) even in present times.
Religious persecution takes place in the form of torture, murder,
intimidation of Buddhist monks and deliberate and systematic destruction
of their places of worship. Fanatical Muslims destroyed and desecrated
the renowned "Navajyoti Buddhist Vihara" (Navajyoti Buddhist Temple) at
Lalyaghona Village in Baghaichari Upazillact) breaking
down many Buddha images.
Muslim religious fundamentalism and intolerance of Buddhists and other
religious minorities are on the rise in Bangladesh. The country’s
military has become ruthless in this regard. In 2006, a group of illicit
Muslim settlers led by Rafique Uddin destroyed the Buddhist temple of
Challyatali village under Longadu, Rangamati and occupied the temple
land.
The biggest problem with Muslims is their belief that Islam is one and only ‘chosen religion’ and Muslims
are the one and only ‘chosen people’. In an Islamic state people of
other faiths are not tolerated. Non-Muslims cannot establish their
shrines or monasteries in any of the Middle
Eastern Muslim countries. They cannot hold their religious functions or
prayers in public in these countries.
In
our country although they are a relatively small settler community, the
Muslims insist on living an alienated and un-integrated life and are agitating
for concessions specified by their Islamic religion and Muslim Shariah
law. The interests of the country as a whole is not their concern,
because Sri Lanka is not an Islamic country. They are least interested
in joining the national “mainstream” and work towards national unity and
well-being. No meaningful dialogue on Islam or on the divisive
attitudes and activities of Muslims is possible because they
unnecessarily feel intimidated whenever legitimate
questions on Islam or the Quran are posed. Those who question are
immediately branded as racists or anti Muslim. Most Muslims lack the
courage to
respond to even the most abject injustices evident in Islamic beliefs
and practices. . No Muslim gives any other religion a status of equality
with Islam. They fail to realize that true open-mindedness consists of
contemplating all premises and weighing the evidence. Reasoning involves
deduction and induction. Why do Muslims cause disharmony and bring
about conflicts and confrontational situations in all societies they
infiltrate? Why? Buddhists
need to be vigilant and need to initiate actions against the abuse of
privileges, aggression and misdemeanor by Muslims.
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