Who really are Ringya's Muslims being massacred by Buddhists? (Photo)

Who really are Ringya's Muslims being massacred by Buddhists? (Photo)

Ringey is often described as the world's most persecuted <x0-minority”. They are an ethnic Muslim group who have lived in Myanmar, consisting of most Buddhists for centuries. Currently, there are about 1.1 million Muslims living in the Southeast Asian country. Rohingaya's inhabitants speak Ruaingga's dialect of one other than [...]

They are an ethnic Muslim group who have lived in Myanmar, consisting of most Buddhists for centuries. Currently, there are about 1.1 million Muslims living in the Southeast Asian country.

Rohingaya's residents speak Ruaingga's dialect of one different than others who speak in the state of Rakhin and throughout Myanmar. They are not known as part of 135 ethnic groups that are part of Myanmar. Their citizenship has been removed in 1982, which they have since considered foreign.

Muslims have lived in the popular area of Myanmar since the 12th century, according to many historians, Alzeera” reported “, Perscope broadcast.

Ringaya's National Organisation of Arabya has said, “Rogingyas have been living in Aracan since ancient times”, referring to the area now known as Rakhine.

During more than 100 years of British rule (1824-1948), there was a considerable quantity of migration of workers to what is now Myanmar from today's India and Bangladesh.

Because the British administered Myanmar as a province of India, such migration was considered internal, according to “Human Rights Watch” (Man Rights Monitor) (HRW).

The migration of workers is seen negatively by the majority of the local population.

After independence, the Myanmar government viewed the migration that took place during British rule as the illegal “, and on this basis they refused citizenship for most of Rohingya”, it says in a report of the 2000 HRW.

This has led many Buddhists to consider Rohingya to be Bengal, rejecting the term Roingya as a recent invention, created for political reasons.

Immediately after Myanmar's independence from the British in 1948, the Union State Act was adopted, determining which ethnicities could gain citizenship for this state.

According to a 2015 report by the International Clinic for Human Rights of Yale School, Roingya was not included as a particular ethnic entity.

However, an act under the government of Myanmar allowed those families who had lived for at least two generations to apply for identification.

Ringya was initially given such identification or even citizenship under the generation arrangement. During this time, some Rohingya also served in parliament.

After the 1962 military coup in Myanmar, things changed dramatically for Roingya. All citizens were required to receive national registration cards.

Roggya, given only one card confirming that he belongs to a foreign identity, which limited jobs and educational opportunities they could pursue and receive.

Following the murders of nine border police officers in October 2016, government troops began pouring into the villages of the state of Rakhine.

The government blamed what they called warriors from a Roingya armed group.

The murders led to a security strike in villages where Roggya lived. During the sting, government troops were charged with a series of human rights violations, including extratrial murder, rape and arson charges denied by the government.

In November 2016, a UN official accused the government of carrying out “ethnic cleansing” of Muslims Ringya. It wasn't the first time such an accusation was made.

In April 2013, for example, HRW said Myanmar was conducting a campaign of ethnic cleansing against Rohingya. The government has consistently denied such charges.

Recently, Myanmar's army has imposed a crackdown on Roingya's population after police actions and an army base attacked in late August.

Residents and activists have described troop scenes that were shooting indiscriminately from unarmed men, women and children, Roggaya.

Since the outbreak of violence, human rights groups have documented the burning of a few 10 areas of Myanmar's Rakhin State. More than 50,000 people have fled from violence, with thousands stuck in a land where no country is controlled.

Since the late 1970 ' s, nearly one million of Ringya's Muslims have fled Myanmar because of widespread persecution.

According to the latest United Nations data in May, more than 168,000 Roingya have left Myanmar since 2012.

Following the violence that erupted last year, more than 87,000 Roingya fled to Bangladesh from October 2016 to July 2017, according to the International Organisation for Migration.

The UN estimated that there are up to 440,000 Ringya refugees in Southeast Asia. In addition, there are about 120,000 internally displaced Rogingya.

Violence in northwest Myanmar that began in late August has forced around 58,000 Roingya to flee across the border in Bangladesh, while another 10,000 are trapped in land that does not belong to Bangladesh and India, Reuters reported, citing UN sources.

But what does Aung San Suu Kyi and Myanmar's government say about Rohingyas?

State Chancellor Aung San Suu Kyi, who is Myanmar's de facto leader, has refused to discuss the state of Roingya.

Aung San Suu Kyi and her government don't know Rohingya as an ethnic group.

The Nobel Peace Prize has no control over the military, but has been criticised for its failure to condemn the force they have exercised without control over more than one million Myanmar Rohinya.

There are about half a million Ringya refugees living mainly in improvised camps in Bangladesh. Most are unregistered.

Bangladesh considers most of those who have crossed its borders and are living outside the camps as “improperly filmed”. Bangladesh has often tried to prevent Ringya's refugees from crossing its borders.

The international community has called Roingya “the most persecuted nation in the world”.

Rights groups have criticised the government's reluctance to accept UN investigators.

What is the army of rescue of Ringya Aran?

The Arab military rescue of Roingya (ARSA), formerly known as “Movement Faith al-Yacren”, issued a statement under his new name in March 2017, saying he was obliged to “fable, preserve and protect the Rochya” community.

The group said it would do this “with our best capacities, as we have the legitimate right under international law to defend itself in line with the principle of self-defense”.

But this group is considered an organisation <x0-terrorist” by the Myanmar government.

According to the International Crisis Group, ARSA has ties to Rohingya, who lives in Saudi Arabia.

Myanmar's government officially classified the group as an organisation <x0terrorist”> on 25 August./Periscopi/

 

 

 

 

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