Sunday, November 20, 2016

( 20.11.2016 ) ေမာင္ေတာျမိဳ႕နယ္ ငန္းေခ်ာင္းေက်းရြာ၌ မသကၤာဖြယ္ ( ၃၃) ဦး ဖမ္းဆီးရမိ ( English - Burmese )

                          ေမာင္ေတာျမိဳ႕နယ္ ငန္းေခ်ာင္းေက်းရြာ၌ မသကၤာဖြယ္ ( ၃၃) ဦး ဖမ္းဆီးရမိ

ေမာင္ေတာၿမိဳ႕နယ္ အတြင္း တပ္္မေတာ္ ႏွင့္ နယ္ျခားေစာင့္ရဲတပ္ဖြဲ႕မွ ႏို၀င္ဘာ ၁၉ ရက္ မြန္းလြဲ (၃) နာရီခြဲအခ်ိန္ နယ္ေျမ ရွင္းလင္းေရး ေဆာင္ရြက္စဥ္ ႏုိ၀င္ဘာ ၁၂ ရက္က မယင္းေခ်ာင္းေက်းရြာ တိုက္ ပြဲျဖစ္စဥ္တြင္ ပါ၀င္ခဲ့ၿပီး တိမ္းေရွာင္သြားသည့္ ဖား၀ပ္ေခ်ာင္း ေက်း ရြာေန ေအာ္လီဟူးေဆာင္(ဘ) အာမိရ္ အပါအ၀င္၇ဦး၊  ေမ်ာေတာင္ ေ က်းရြာမွ ၉ ဦး၊ ပြင့္ျဖဴေခ်ာင္း ေက်းရြာမွ ၁၇ ဦး စုစုေပါင္း မသကၤာဖြယ္ ၃၃ ဦးအား ဖမ္းဆီးရမိသည္။
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Thirty-three more suspects in Maungtaw violent attacks arrested

The security forces comprising of the government troops and the border guard police arrested thirty-three suspects during the area clearance operations in Nganchaung village, Maungtaw township on saturday, according to the announcement of the information team of state Counsellor’s Office yesterday.

It is found that the suspects are those who were involved in the clash with the troops at Mayinchaung Village on 12th November and had fled from the village, said the announcement.

Those suspects composed of seven including Auli husaung from Pharwutchaung village, nine from Myawtaung village and seventeen from Pwintphyuchaung village, according to the announcement.


( 19.11.2016 ) Springvale arson suspect explainer: Who are the Rohingya?

Broede Carmody, Lindsay Murdoch

The man who allegedly set fire to a Commonwealth Bank branch in Springvale on Friday morning is an asylum seeker from Myanmar, according to federal government sources.

It is understood the 21-year-old Rohingya man is living in the community on a bridging visa.
 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar at shelters in Aceh Province, Indonesia, in January.  Photo: Jefri Tarigan.   

He arrived in Australia three or four years ago and has spent time on Christmas Island.
Police are yet to interview him, due to the extent of his injuries.
The fire left 27 people, including a toddler and people aged in their 80s, injured. Two people – including the man who allegedly lit the blaze – were still in a critical condition on Saturday morning.

Who are the Rohingya?
The Rohingya are a Muslim minority group living in Myanmar.

The Myanmar government denies them basic rights such as citizenship and the freedom to travel, despite the fact they have lived in the state of Rakhine for centuries.

The term "Rohingya" is divisive in Myanmar. The government refuses to acknowledge the term, referring to them as Bengalis because they originally migrated to Myanmar from the bordering territory now known as Bangladesh.

 Three-year-old Anwarsah, a Rohingya child, poses for an identification photo at a temporary shelter in Aceh province, Indonesia, in May 2015. Photo: Getty Images.

Even Aung San Suu Kyi refuses to use the term, instead calling the Rohingya a "Muslim community in Rakhine State".
The Rohingya are one of the most persecuted minorities in the world, according to the United Nations.
Myanmar's foreign minister Aung San Suu Kyi refuses to use the name Rohingya. Photo: AP

Why are they being persecuted?

Myanmar Buddhists see the Rohingya as illegal immigrants.

In 1982, a law was passed denying the Rohingya full citizenship. The law also allows the government to confiscate Rohingya property.
Tens of thousands of Rohingya are languishing in squalid camps after communal violence drove them from their homes.

Hundreds of homes have been torched and dozens of Rohingya killed and raped in Rakhine over the past several weeks, prompting calls for the government to lift a military lockdown of a large part of the state and allow international aid organisations, the UN, independent observers and the media into the area.

Are there many Rohingya in Australia?

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who have fled Rakhine have made it to Malaysia where many work as low-paid laborers.

Most of 4000 refugees Malaysia intended to send to Australia under a deal with the then Australian Labor government in 2011 were to be Rohingya. The deal was blocked by the High Court and the Liberal-Nationals opposition.

Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott's infamous "nope, nope, nope" line came after he was asked if Australia would take in any Rohingya refugees caught up in the crisis last year.

The Turnbull government has remained firm in its refusal to consider any refugee who wishes to be resettled in Australia if they registered with the UNHCR in Indonesia after July 2014.

As a result, there are not many Rohingya refugees in Australia.

'One person does not speak for anyone but himself'

Asylum Seeker Resource Centre spokesman Kon Karapanagiotidis said Friday's fire was a tragedy.
"But scapegoating refugees now as an excuse to justify fear and racism would make an already awful situation much more tragic," he said.

"The people we work with are people who are fleeing violence. [They] are incredibly law-abiding and peaceful people and one person does not speak for anyone but himself."

Saturday, November 19, 2016

( 19.11.2016 ) UN: 30,000 displaced by violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine ( AFP )

AFP November 19, 2016

The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said 15,000 people were believed to have fled their homes over the space of 48 hours.



YANGON: Up to 30,000 people have been displaced by violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state, half of them over the course of last weekend when dozens of people died in clashes with the military, the UN said Friday.

Troops have poured into a strip of land along the Bangladesh border, an area which is largely home to the stateless Muslim Rohingya minority, since coordinated attacks on police posts last month.

The army this week said troops have killed nearly 70 people as they hunt the attackers, although activists say the number could be much higher.

Violence escalated over the weekend, with state media reporting troops had killed more than 30 people in two days of fighting after the army responded to ambushes by bringing in helicopter gunships.

The UN’s special rapporteur on Myanmar, Yanghee Lee, criticised the government led by Nobel Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi for their handling of the crisis and called for “urgent action”.

The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said 15,000 people were believed to have fled their homes over the space of 48 hours.

“Up to 30,000 people are now estimated to be displaced and thousands more affected by the 9 October armed attacks and subsequent security operations across the north of Rakhine State,” said a spokesman for the UN OCHA.

“This includes as many as 15,000 people who, according to unverified information, may have been displaced after clashes between armed actors and the military on 12-13 November.”

Activists have accused troops of killing civilians, raping women and torching homes — allegations the government has vehemently denied.

Authorities have heavily restricted access to the area, making it difficult to independently verify government reports or accusations of army abuse.

A delegation of UN officials and foreign diplomats made a brief trip to the area in an effort to get aid deliveries reinstated, which state media has hailed as proof no abuses had been carried out.

The resurgence of violence in western Rakhine state has deepened a crisis that already posed a critical challenge to Suu Kyi’s administration seven months after it took power.

More than 100 people died in 2012 in clashes between the majority Buddhist population and the Muslim Rohingya, and tens of thousands of them were driven into displacement camps.

The UN’s Lee slammed the government’s handling of the crisis, and urged a transparent investigation into accusations of rape and murder by the security forces.

“State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi has recently stated that the government is responding to the situation based on the rule of law. Yet I am unaware of any efforts on the part of the government to look into the allegations of human rights violations,” Lee said in a statement.

“The security forces must not be given carte blanche to step up their operations under the smokescreen of having allowed access to an international delegation. Urgent action is needed to bring resolution to the situation.”

( 19.11.2016 ) Myanmar: UN urges aid access, warns of rights violations after 'lockdown' in northern Rakhine state

Rohingyas who were displaced by violence in 2012 stand outside their newly-rebuilt home in the village of In Bar Yi, Rakhine State, Myamar. Photo: Julia Wallace/IRIN

18 November 2016 – Deeply concerned about the safety and wellbeing of civilians in the northern part of Rakhine state in Myanmar, United Nations entities today urged the country's authorities to take immediate actions to address humanitarian and human rights situations.

( 19.11.2016 ) UNHCR urges Myanmar to protect Rohingya people ( BBC )

BBC Online

The humanitarian watchdog of the United Nations, UNHCR, on Friday urged Myanmar government to ensure the protection and dignity of all civilians in northern Rakhine state in Myanmar.

The UN body also hoped that the Myanmar government will protect its citizens in accordance with the rule of law and its international obligations, said a press statement.

The UNHCR said it is deeply concerned about the safety and well-being of civilians in the northern part of Rakhine state.

“We appeal for calm and for humanitarian access to assess and meet the needs of thousands of people who have reportedly been displaced from their homes by the ongoing security operation,” the statement added.

The UNHCR said, “The affected population is believed to be in urgent need of food, shelter and medical care.”

UNHCR urges the government of Myanmar to immediately allow humanitarian actors to resume the life-saving activities they had been carrying out for some 160,000 civilians in northern Rakhine state until such activities were suspended on 9 October.

The humanitarian watchdog also requested to the government of Bangladesh to keep its border with Myanmar open and allow safe passage to any civilians from Myanmar fleeing violence.

( 19.11.2016 ) Reports of Rohingyas at Bangladesh border 'false' ( Reuters )


YANGON • Myanmar's state media has denied Bangladesh border guards' accounts of Rohingya Muslims fleeing conflict at home by trying to cross into the northern neighbour.

A commanding officer of Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) said on Friday his staff provided food and medicine to 82 people, including women and children, attempting to leave Myanmar, but turned them back from the frontier. Two boats with 86 people were pushed back last Tuesday.

State-run English newspaper Global New Light of Myanmar said yesterday a newly created information task force had found the reports to be untrue.

"An inquiry into news reports by Reuters that nearly 200 people fleeing Myanmar had been arrested and repulsed yesterday by Bangladesh border guards has been found to be false," said the newspaper, quoting BGB officials.

Soldiers have flooded the north of Rakhine state, along Myanmar's frontier with Bangladesh, responding to attacks by alleged Muslim militants on border posts on Oct 9.

Sixty-nine suspected insurgents and 17 members of the security forces have been killed since the violence began, according to official reports. Earlier this month, Myanmar denied accusations by the Rohingya that its military had killed people fleeing the conflict, which has displaced up to 30,000 people.

Rohingya residents have told Reuters that hundreds have tried to flee to Bangladesh after fighting intensified a week ago. The United Nations refugee agency has said the border should be kept open for people fleeing violence.

The Global New Light of Myanmar said the government planned to create an investigation commission to look into the "violent attacks in Maungdaw", the region in Rakhine at the centre of the unrest.

The report did not specify whether the probe would include an investigation of allegations of human rights abuses that the UN, the United States and Britain have called for.

REUTERS

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on November 20, 2016, with the headline 'Reports of Rohingyas at Bangladesh border 'false''. Print Edition | Subscribe

Myanmar rejects reports army killed Rohingya fleeing Rakhine conflict

REUTERS
By Antoni Slodkowski
19.11.2016
Up to 30,000 people are now estimated to be displaced and thousands more affected by the October 9 attacks and the following security operation, said Pierre Peron, the spokesman of the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha) in Myanmar

Myanmar’s government rejected accusations by minority Rohingya Muslims that the military has killed residents fleeing the conflict in the northwest of the country, in which at least 86 people have been killed so far and up to 30,000 displaced.

( 19.11.2016 ) Melbourne bank fire suspect a Rohingya (Straits Times-SP)


November 15, 2016. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun
By Antoni Slodkowski
Reuters
November 19, 2016

YANGON -- Myanmar's government on Friday rejected accusations by minority Rohingya Muslims that the military has killed residents fleeing the conflict in the northwest of the country, in which at least 86 people have been killed so far and up to 30,000 displaced.

( 19.11.2016 ) Aljazeera TV News ( Nay San Lwin )

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Rohingya Blogger, Nay San Lwin had given a briefing of current Rohingya situation on Al Jazeera English Live today at 11:30am Frankfurt, Germany (local time).

As many as 400 Rohingya civilians have been killed. About 2000 Rohingya houses have been burnt down and at least 150 women including 10-year-old girl were raped by Myanmar Army and Border Guard Police.

( 19.11.2016 ) 14 Suspect Villagers Ergriffen in Maungtaw Township


နိုင်ငံတကာအဖွဲ့အစည်းများက မောင်တောဒေသသို့လူသားချင်း စာနာ ထောက်ထားမှု အကူအညီများ ထောက် ပံ့ ပေးလျက်ရှိနိုင်ငံတကာ အဖွဲ့အစည်းများက မောင်တောဒေသသို့ လူသားချင်း စာနာ ထောက်ထားမှု အကူ အ ညီများ ထောက်ပံ့ပေးလျက်ရှိပြီး ယင်းထောက်ပံ့မှုများကို WFP ဒေသခံ ဝန်ထမ်းများက သတ်မှတ်နယ်မြေအ လိုက် ဖြန့်ဖြူးပို့ဆောင်ပေးလျက်ရှိကြောင်း သိရသည်။

ကမ္ဘာ့စားနပ်ရိက္ခာ အစီအစဉ် WFP မှ နိုဝင်ဘာ ၄ ရက်မှ နိုဝင်ဘာ ၁၅ ရက်အထိ ဆန် ၂၀၂ ဒသမ ၃၀၈ တန်၊ ပဲ ၂၅ ဒသမ ၀၁၃ တန်၊ ဆီ ၄ ဒသမ ၂၁၇ တန်၊ ဆား ၂ ဒသမ ၃၇၄ တန်၊ ဘီစကစ် ၃၅၁ ဒသမ ၂၈၆ တန်နှင့် အာဟာရမုန့် တန် ၂၀၀ ထောက်ပံ့ပေးခဲ့သည်။ အလားတူ WFP အနေဖြင့် အကြမ်းဖက် တိုက်ခိုက် မှုများ ပြုလုပ် ခဲ့သော ကြက်ရိုးပြင်၊ ငါးစားကြူးနှင့် ပြောင်ပိုက်ကျေးရွာများသို့ ၂၀၁၆ ခုနှစ်၊ နိုဝင် ဘာလ ၈ ရက်တွင်လည်းကောင်း၊ ဝါးပိတ်ကျေးရွာသို့ နိုဝင်ဘာ ၉ရက်နှင့်၁၀ ရက်များတွင် လည်းကောင်း၊ လူသား ချင်းစာနာထောက်ထားမှု အကူအညီများ ပေးပို့ ဖြန့်ဖြူးခဲ့ရာ ဆန် ၁၀၁၁ အိတ်နှင့် ၄၈ ပြည်၊ ပဲ ၈၉ အိတ်၊ ဆီ ၃၆၈၈ လီတာ၊ ဆား ၃၉၄ ပိသာနှင့် အခြား အာဟာရဖြည့်စွက် စားနပ်ရိက္ခာများ ထောက်ပံ့ ကူညီ ခဲ့ပြီး ဖြစ် သည်။ အလားတူ လူမှုဝန်ထမ်း၊ ကယ်ဆယ်ရေးနှင့် ပြန်လည်နေရာချ ထားရေး ဝန်ကြီးဌာနနှင့် ပြည်နယ် အစိုးရ တို့ မှလည်း စားနပ်ရိက္ခာများ ပံ့ပိုးကူညီလျက်ရှိသည်။

အလားတူ လက်ရှိ ထောက်ပံ့ကူညီလျက်ရှိသော လူသားချင်းစာနာ ထောက်ထားမှု အကူအညီများ ထိ ထိရောက်ရောက် ဖြန့်ခွဲပို့ဆောင်နိုင်ရေး တိုးမြှင့်် ဆောင်ရွက်သွားမည် ဖြစ်သည်။



Friday, November 18, 2016

( 18.11.2016 ) Myanmar urged by UN expert to let aid flow to Rakhine State

The New York Times
Published: 15:00 November 19, 2016

The security lockdown ‘not acceptable’, Yanghee Lee says
Geneva: Amid mounting reports of violent unrest and brutal reprisals by Myanmar’s army in the mainly Muslim state of Rakhine, a UN expert said Friday that the country’s government should let aid agencies into the area and investigate allegations of abuse instead of brushing them aside with blanket denials.

Last month, after insurgents attacked border posts, killing nine police officers, officials in Myanmar closed the southwestern state to aid agencies and independent journalists. The army sent in more troops and helicopter gunships in the past week after further attacks resulted in military casualties.

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