MYANMAR - A Letter from Rohingya
More than 270,000 Rohingyans, a large percentage of them women and children, have fled Myanmar in the last two weeks. [Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]
A resident of Myanmar's Rakhine State discusses daily life and the abuses and attacks Rohingyans endure.
“For
all my life, all 24 years of it, I've been a prisoner in this open air jail you
know as Rakhine State. I was born in Myanmar, as were my parents, but my
citizenship was snatched away before I was even conceived. We're facing
extinction, and unless the international community stands with us, one of the
most persecuted people in the world, we will face genocide and you, you will
all be a party to it.
My movement, education, access to healthcare and career have been heavily restricted because of my ethnicity. I'm banned from working in the government, denied the right to pursue higher education, barred from visiting the capital, Yangon, and even stopped from leaving northern Rakhine State. I'm subjected to the worst form of discrimination, all because I'm a Rohingyan Muslim.
For
years, my people, who have been denied their most basic rights, are killed on a
near daily basis. Shot dead in plain sight, forcibly and systematically made
homeless, our homes razed in front of our very eyes; we're the victims of a
brutal state.
For
you to fully appreciate what our conditions are like, I'm going to use an
analogy: imagine a mouse stuck in a cage with a hungry cat. That's what it's
like for the Rohingyans. Our only method of survival is to run, or hope someone
helps us get out.
For
those of us that have remained, there's a systematic campaign to separate us
from the wider Rakhine community. We're called "Kalar" [a slur often
used against Muslims] by Buddhists to our faces. Whether you're a child or an
old man, no one escapes the abuse. We face discrimination at schools and at
hospitals, and there's been a boycott campaign by Buddhists to avoid us at all
costs.
"Only
buy from Buddhists," they say. "If you give a penny to a Buddhist,
they'll help build a Pagoda (temple), but if you give a penny to a Muslim,
they'll build a mosque." These kinds of comments, they've become the norm
and helped encourage Buddhist extremists to attack us.
When
Aung San Suu Kyi, a Noble Peace Prize winner, won parliamentary elections in
2015 and ended half a century of dominance by the military, we had high hopes
change was coming. We were confident that this woman, hailed as a beacon of
democracy, would end our abuse and oppression. Sadly, it soon became clear that
not only would she not be our voice, she would ignore our suffering. Her
silence showed she was complicit in the violence.
In
the end, she failed us; our last hope, failed us.
In
2012, a huge number of the Rohingya were slaughtered in one of the worst bouts
of communal violence. Around 140,000 were internally displaced, an event
that would repeat itself in 2016. Shot, slaughtered, and burned alive in front
of their families, the violence last October would give rise to the Arakan
Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA), a small group of men who decided to defend
themselves and fight back. Armed with just sticks and stones, they knew they
couldn't fend off the well-equipped Myanmar army but they tried nonetheless.
Still,
now our sisters and mothers are forced to give birth in paddy fields as we run
for our lives in this violence that you say is between two equal sides. It is
not. Children being shot at as they flee and women's bodies floating in rivers
is not an equal fight.
We're
facing extinction, and unless the international community stands with us, one
of the most persecuted people in the world, we will face genocide and you, you
will all be a witness to it.
The
author of this letter has requested anonymity due to fear of attacks from the
government.
He
spoke to Al Jazeera's Faisal Edroos.
The plight of the Rohingyan Muslims has reached critical levels. Our
URGENT appeal is to assist in providing aid to the refugees fleeing
persecution. Kindly assist our Rohingyan brethren in their desperate hour of
need. Jazakallah Khayr!
Ways to Donate
Donate over the Phone
0861 786 243
0861 786 243
Donate using your mobile
Text Lillah + R10
to 48708
Text Lillah + R10
to 48708
Post Cheque to
P.O.Box 481
3310 - Estcourt
P.O.Box 481
3310 - Estcourt
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