Popular Posts!

LEVIS JEAN SHOP!

Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Myanmar Rohingya militants massacred Hindus, says Amnesty

Amnesty says there were many children among the Hindus killed

Rohingya Muslim militants in Myanmar killed dozens of Hindu civilians during attacks last August, according to an investigation by Amnesty International.

The group called Arsa killed up to 99 Hindu civilians in one, or possibly two massacres, said the rights group. Arsa had denied involvement. 

The killings came in the first days of an uprising against Burmese forces, who are also accused of atrocities.

Since August nearly 700,000 Rohingyas and others have fled the violence.

The conflict has also displaced members of the majority Buddhist population in Myanmar (also called Burma) as well as members of the Hindu minority. 

Amnesty says interviews it conducted with refugees in Bangladesh and in Rakhine state confirmed that mass killings carried out by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (Arsa) took place in a cluster of villages in northern Maungdaw Township at the time of its attacks on police posts in late August.

The findings also show Arsa was responsible for violence against civilians, on a smaller scale, in other areas.

Screengrab of Arsa video on 25 August 2017Image copyrightYOUTUBE
Image captionArsa has released videos featuring its leader Ata Ullah (centre)

The report details how Arsa members on 26 August attacked the Hindu village of Ah Nauk Kha Maung Seik. 

"In this brutal and senseless act, members of Arsa captured scores of Hindu women, men and children and terrorised them before slaughtering them outside their own villages," the report said.

Hindu survivors told Amnesty they either saw relatives being killed or heard their screams.

One woman from the village of Ah Nauk Kha Maung Seik said: "They slaughtered the men. We were told not to look at them … They had knives. They also had some spades and iron rods. … We hid ourselves in the shrubs there and were able to see a little … My uncle, my father, my brother - they were all slaughtered."

Map

Arsa fighters are accused of killing 20 men, 10 women, and 23 children, 14 of whom were under the age of eight. 

Amnesty said the bodies of 45 people from the village were unearthed in four mass graves in late September. The remains of the other victims, as well as 46 from the neighbouring village of Ye Bauk Kyar, have not been found.

The investigation suggests that a massacre of Hindu men, women, and children in Ye Bauk Kyar happened on the same day, bringing the estimated total number of dead to 99. 

Presentational grey line

Why scepticism over a mass grave?

Jonathan Head, BBC News, Bangkok

Last September, as international alarm was growing over the scale of the Rohingya exodus to Bangladesh, and over the horrific accounts of atrocities by the Myanmar security forces, the government in Nay Pyi Taw announced that it had discovered a mass grave. 

But the victims were not Muslims - they were Hindus, killed, said the government, by militants from Arsa. 

Journalists were taken to the site to see the grave and the bodies. However the government's continued refusal to allow independent human rights researchers into Rakhine left lingering doubts about exactly what happened in the village of Ah Nauk Kha Maung Seik, and a neighbouring village, Ye Bauk Kyar. 

The fact that the Myanmar government refused to acknowledge any serious abuses by its forces, in the face of huge amounts of testimony, undermined its credibility further.

At the time Arsa denied any involvement in this massacre - the group has made no public statements for four months. Myanmar has complained of one-sided reporting of the conflict in Rakhine, but many foreign media, including the BBC, did report the killing of Hindus back in September.

Presentational grey line

Amnesty also criticised what it said was "an unlawful and grossly disproportionate campaign of violence by Myanmar's security forces".

"Arsa's appalling attacks were followed by the Myanmar military's ethnic cleansing campaign against the Rohingya population as a whole."

The human rights group says its findings are based "on dozens of interviews conducted there [in Rakhine] and across the border in Bangladesh, as well as photographic evidence analyzed by forensic pathologists". 

The investigation "sheds much-needed light on the largely under-reported human rights abuses by Arsa during northern Rakhine State's unspeakably dark recent history," Amnesty's Tirana Hassan said.

Rohingya refugees wait for humanitarian aid to be distributed at the Balu Khali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh 5 October 2017.Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionNearly 700,000 Rohingya, many of them women and children, have fled to Bangladesh since August

"It's hard to ignore the sheer brutality of Arsa's actions, which have left an indelible impression on the survivors we've spoken to. Accountability for these atrocities is every bit as crucial as it is for the crimes against humanity carried out by Myanmar's security forces in northern Rakhine State."

Arsa has denied such accusations in the past, saying that claims of its militants killing villagers were "lies".

The Rohingya - a stateless mostly Muslim minority - are widely despised in Myanmar, where they are considered to be illegal migrants from Bangladesh, despite the fact that some have been in Myanmar for generations. 

Bangladesh also denies them citizenship.


.......................

Rohingyan Militants Killed Hindus in Myanmar Reports Amnesty | CNN News18

Rohingya militants massacred Hindu villagers during last year's uprising in Myanmar's Rakhine, Amnesty International said Wednesday in a report that sheds fresh light on the complex ethnic rivalries in the state. The killings took place on August 25, 2017, the report said, the same day that the Rohingya insurgents staged coordinated deadly raids on police posts that tipped the state into crisis. Myanmar's military responded to the insurgent raids with harsh reprisals that forced some 700,000 Rohingya Muslims out of the mainly Buddhist country where they have faced persecution for years. CNN-News18 (formerly known as CNN-IBN) has been the world’s window to India and India's window to the world. The channel has been a ‘thought leader’ and has pioneered several path-breaking initiatives that include CNN-News18 Indian of the Year, Real Heroes, The Citizen Journalist Show, India Positive, State of the Nation (channel’s flagship bi-annual poll) to name a few. During the last 9 years, the channel has won over 197 awards and accolades at the prestigious Asian Television Awards, Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards, Indian Television Academy Awards, News Television Awards and Indian Telly Awards, making it India’s Most Awarded English News Channel. CNN-IBN's news portal IBNLive.com has now changed to News18.com Subscribe our channel for latest news updates: https://goo.gl/rgjh7Q

Friday, April 26, 2019

Myanmar to lift ban on sending domestic workers to Singapore

Maids at an agency in Hougang. The Myanmar government had imposed a ban on sending the country's domestic helpers to work in Singapore nearly five years ago, amid concerns of ill-treatment and abuse.
Maids at an agency in Hougang. The Myanmar government had imposed a ban on sending the country's domestic helpers to work in Singapore nearly five years ago, amid concerns of ill-treatment and abuse.PHOTO: ST FILE

YANGON - The Myanmar government has lifted a ban on sending the country's domestic helpers to work in Singapore, nearly five years after it imposed the restriction amid concerns of ill-treatment and abuse, the Myanmar Times reported on Friday (April 26).

The report cited an employment agency association as saying that the Labour Ministry had lifted the ban preventing the country's domestic helpers from travelling to work in Singapore and three other places - Thailand, Hong Kong and Macau.

U Peter Nyunt Maung, president of the Myanmar Overseas Employment Agencies Federation, said despite the lifting of the ban, the employment of the country's domestic helpers would still be strictly regulated.

He said the move to lift the ban would help the government to better oversee the sector as the country's domestic workers had continued to work abroad illegally even when the ban was in place, he said.

"During the ban (imposed by the government), domestic workers went abroad illegally. Making it legal will make it easier to control," the Myanmar Times quoted him as saying.

He said the Labour Ministry and the federation will meet to sign a contract with Singapore's labour placement agencies to ensure protection for Myanmar domestic helpers working in Singapore.

He added that the federation had been asked to submit a detailed plan on the procedures for hiring housemaids abroad for employment agencies in Myanmar and Singapore. The procedures would particularly focus on the rules and contracts to prevent cases of domestic workers being charged excessive service fees by employment agencies.

"We won't let the bad experiences suffered by our maids in the past happen again," U Peter Nyunt Maung said.

According to the federation, Singapore is the first of the four places where the domestic workers will be sent to as part of a pilot project.

Myanmar had barred its citizens from working abroad as domestic workers amid concerns of abuse in 2014.

Despite the ban, however, an estimated 50,000 Myanmar women continued to travel to Singapore to work as maids through placement agencies in both countries, the Myanmar Times reported.

Ref:https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/myanmar-to-lift-ban-on-sending-domestic-workers-to-singapore

Terrorists are among us be vigilant! The Big Read: Battered in the Middle East, ISIS eyes South-east Asia as next terrorism hotspot!

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

My Blog List