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Diplomatic solution: Zaw Min Htut (second from left) and other Rohingya people in Japan stage a protest in front of the Myanmar Embassy in July. AYAKO MIE |
Rohingya ask Japan to help stop Myanmar violence
By AYAKO MIE
Staff writer
Rohingya people in Japan, a Muslim ethnic
minority in their home country of Myanmar, are asking the government to
help ease escalating tensions there between Buddhists and Muslims that
experts warn could develop into an international conflict.
Deadly riots first broke out in the western state
of Rakhine near the border with Bangladesh in July after an Arakanese
Buddhist girl was raped and murdered in May, allegedly by three Rohingya
youths. The incident set off an onslaught of revenge attacks against
Rohingya.
Even though the Myanmar government announced
emergency rule in Rakhine, human rights observers said security forces
did little to stop the violence and in some cases took part. At least 78
people were killed and more than 5,300 houses destroyed, according to
government figures.
Rohingya in Japan who fled Myanmar to seek
political asylum here are pinning their hopes on the Japanese government
to pressure the Myanmar government to treat their compatriots better,
as Japan has had an amiable history with the government during its years
of repressive military rule.
"If there is a government the Myanmar
government would listen to, it's the Japanese government," said Zaw Min
Htut, president of the Burmese Rohingya Association of Japan.
In 1998, he fled political persecution in Myanmar
and came to Japan, where he was first detained as an illegal immigrant.
He is one of only a few Rohingya to be granted refugee status in Japan.
Of 200 Rohingya who belong to the association, 15 have been granted
official asylum.
The government of Myanmar President Thein
Sein is now bringing sweeping changes to the once isolated nation since
it pledged to transition into a democratic system. It has made
reconciliation efforts among Myanmar's more than 100 ethnic minority
groups, but not the Rohingya, who were excluded by the government from
holding citizenship when the country enacted a citizenship law in 1982.
The United Nations estimates that about 800,000
Rohingya live in Rakhine state and describes them as one of the most
persecuted and stateless minorities in the world.
The Rohingya issue is such an emotional one
in Myanmar that even opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi remains silent,
even though the ethnic Muslim group has been a staunch supporter of the
democratic leader. Some pundits say the hatred against the Rohingya has
been ingrained even among the most vocal human rights activists in
Myanmar.
In an interview with The Japan Times, Zaw Min
Htut said Japan wields more diplomatic clout as it was never a harsh
critic of the military junta, while the United States and the European
Union imposed economic sanctions against the military dictatorship. When
Thein Sein visited Japan in April on the first state visit by a Myanmar
leader in 28 years, Japan forgave $3.7 billion in debt to support the
country's nascent democratization.
Officials at the Foreign Ministry said they
recognize the clashes in Rakhine state, and that the government is
paying close attention to developments, but they are on the fence about
taking direct action aside from providing humanitarian assistance
through the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
Mizuho Fukushima, president of the Social
Democratic Party and a lawyer who has worked on human rights issues,
believes Japan could at least express concern to prompt the government
of Thein Sein to take a more humanitarian approach to this issue.
The Upper House lawmaker has been supportive
of Zaw Min Htut's human rights activities since the time he was detained
by immigration authorities in Ushiku, Ibaraki Prefecture.
"With the Myanmar government shifting toward a
democratic system, more Japanese companies are eyeing business
opportunities there," said Fukushima, who met with officials from the
Foreign Ministry and Zaw Min Htut to discuss the Rohingya issue in early
August.
"It might impact Japanese businesses if the
clash escalates even further," said Fukushima, who said she will push
the government to support an independent United Nations investigation
into the matter.
Following international pressure, Thein Sein
launched a commission to investigate the August sectarian killings. But
experts warn that the clashes could get worse and have the potential to
develop into an international conflict involving Muslim Bangladesh. They
say mediation by a third party, such as Japan, is needed.
"It would be a great opportunity to exercise
Japan's diplomatic skills," said Kei Nemoto, a professor at Sophia
University in Tokyo and an expert on Myanmar, likening the situation to
when Japan mediated peace talks between the Sri Lankan government and
the rebel Tamil Tigers in 2003. "But first Thein Sein has to agree to
such a third-party mediation framework, which might be difficult."
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