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19-25 August: Burma Government Must Prevent Ongoing Communal and Religious Violence by Tackling Impunity

August 26, 2013

QuintanaThis week, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Burma, Tomás Ojea Quintana, reported that during his recent 10-day official mission to Burma his convoy was besieged by anti-Muslim protestors in Meikhtila, Mandalay Region, the scene of anti-Muslim violence in March of this year. However, the week’s unrest did not stop there: a few days later, Buddhist mobs burnt down dozens of shops and homes belonging to Muslims in Kantbalu, Sagaing Region, after a Muslim man was arrested for allegedly attempting to rape a Buddhist woman. Unfortunately, such incidents in Burma are nothing new: 2013 has seen outbreaks of religious and communal violence afflicting increasing numbers of towns across the country. Violence flared up most notably in Meikhtila on 20 March, lasting for more than a week, and also on 28 and 29 May in Lashio, Shan State, where one Muslim was killed and four Buddhists injured, and on 29 May in Mone, Kyauk Gyi Township, Pegu Region, where mobs destroyed a mosque and a madrasa. In addition, nearly 250,000 people, the majority of whom are Muslims, have been displaced by the violence across the country thus far.

In his statement from Rangoon International Airport at the end of his visit, Quintana said that he was “left totally unprotected by the nearby police”, which gave him “an insight into the fear residents would have felt when being chased down by violent mobs during the violence last March as police allegedly stood by as angry mobs beat, stabbed and burned to death some 43 people”. Such police inaction – or even complicity – is a recurring theme in several of the instances of communal or religious violence. Security forces are understood to have intervened in this week’s violence in Sagaing Region, but not before at least 20 homes, over a dozen shops and a rice mill were set on fire and destroyed.

On 20 August, Physicians for Human Rights released a report titled “Patterns of Anti-Muslim Violence in Burma: A Call for Accountability and Prevention”, which documents the recent wave of violence against Muslims throughout Burma. The report points to the government of Burma’s failure to address human rights violations, which in turn has given rise to increasing instances of violence and rights violations, and identifies patterns emerging from the violence. The report also documents multiple occasions when police and/or the Burma Army attacked Muslim communities or watched as they were attacked, instead of protecting them, an allegation that is supported by Quintana’s experiences in Meikhtila. According to Dr. Holly Atkinson, one of the report’s authors, the government of Burma “has not only failed to protect vulnerable groups, but has created a dangerous culture of impunity that fuels human rights violations.”

In the absence of a principled, determined and robust response from the government of Burma, manifested in strong local policing, communities will feel that they can vent their frustrations and air inter-religious and inter-communal hostilities with impunity. Equally, those who incite such violence will feel empowered to continue doing so, in the knowledge that they will face no consequences from the state. In response to recent events in Sagaing Region, radical monk Wirathu blamed Muslims for the violence, using the derogatory and thus inflammatory term “kalar”: “Kalars are troublemakers. When a kalar is there, the problem will be there. If every time a kalar made trouble and people responded with violence, both Buddhists and Buddhism will be harmed.”

The government of Burma must ensure that those who perpetrate or incite violence or discrimination on religious – or any other – grounds must be brought to account in accordance with domestic and international standards of due legal process. It is also vital that the root causes of the religious and communal violence are addressed, namely rising Buddhist nationalism, a lack of rule of law, and wider discrimination against ethnic and religious minorities. Furthermore, opposition democratic leaders and the international community must denounce such impunity and pressure the government of Burma to take immediate action. In order to safeguard Burma’s transition to a truly peaceful and democratic country, in which the human rights of everyone are respected, there must be national reconciliation. Genuine reconciliation in Burma means the end of religious and ethnic discrimination, and the dawn of respect for religious and ethnic diversity. Such genuine reconciliation cannot be achieved so long as impunity prevails. 

News Highlights

Authorities reject UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Burma, Tomás Ojea Quintana’s claim that they did not protect him when his convoy was attacked in Meikhtila

Inside Burma

Constitutional review report to go to Parliament before the end of the year meanwhile United Nationalities Federal Council and the United Nationalities Alliance plan to draft a new federal Constitution

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi says Burma needs stronger political parties and the NLD plans a campaign to increase public knowledge of the Constitution

Upper House of Parliament recommends amendments to the Printing and Publishing Enterprise Law and Lower House of Parliament considers amending the Electronic Transactions Law

Border Guard Forces attack the Kachin Independence Army in north-eastern Kachin State

The Kachin Independence Organization refuses relief for internally displaced persons from Kachin State Red Cross

A schoolteacher in Naypyidaw is forced to resign after attending the 8888 Silver Jubilee commemoration

Burma foreign trade rises to US$7 billion and Parliament approves US$100 million loan from China

Investors will spend US$1.6 million in 2013 on socioeconomic development projects along the Shwe Oil and Gas Pipelines

The Asian Development Bank will provide US$225,000 to facilitate participation of civil society in the implementation of strategies and projects carried out with the bank’s financial support

Displaced residents still await compensation for Thilawa Special Economic Zone project in Rangoon Region

Regional

Dozens of Rohingya escape from a detention facility where they were being held for illegally entering Thailand

Thailand National Human Rights Commission member calls for a solution to problems faced by displaced Rohingya in the country

International

World Trade Organisation is discussing an Enhanced Integrated Framework program to assist Burma’s economic development

Opinion

Myanmar’s Religious Diversity: Dialogue Trumps Violence
By Archbishop Charles Maung Bo and Benedict Rogers
The Myanmar Times

Lack of Effective Government Response to Anti-Muslim Violence Threatens Reforms in Burma
By Andrea Gittleman
The Huffington Post

Still in the Dark on Myanmar’s Nuclear Ambitions
By Robert Kelley and Francis Wade
Al Jazeera

Latest from the Blog

Whose Guns Are Silent?
By Burma Partnership

Actions

Activists plan to form a network to help protect political prisoners

About 500 farmers from across Burma call on the government to address land confiscation and to return farmland seized under the previous military regime

Statements and Press Releases

APHR Calls on Thailand to Address Concerns over Rohingya Asylum Seekers and Coordinate a Regional Response to Tensions in Myanmar’s Rakhine State
By ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights

Burma: Revise or Reject Draft Association Law
By Human Rights Watch

Thailand: Release and Protect Rohingya ‘Boat People’
By Human Rights Watch

PHR Documents Systematic Patterns of Anti-Muslim Violence in Burma
By Physicians for Human Rights

Resolution on Religious Intolerance in Burma
By Progressive National Baptist Convention

Statement of the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in Myanmar
By Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in Myanmar Tomás Ojea Quintana

Statement Attributable to the Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Myanmar, Mr. Ashok Nigam, on World Humanitarian Day
By UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Myanmar, Mr. Ashok Nigam

Reports

Patterns of Anti-Muslim Violence in Burma: A Call for Accountability and Prevention
By Physicians for Human Rights

Burma: Implications of Religious and Ethnic Violence
By US Commission on International Religious Freedom

This post is in: Weekly Highlights