Who are the Rohingya Muslims?

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The recent massacre and the ongoing persecution of the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar has made headlines around the world, and triggered debates at all levels of the society. However, the conflict, which is rooted in ethnic, religious and cultural differences with the mainstream Tibeto-Burman people, can be better understood through the lens of history. According to a report published in Gulf News, the brown-skinned Rohingya with Bengali features complain that they have been persecuted for decades despite centuries-old roots in the region. The United Nations says they are among the most persecuted people in the world. Experts say that the key to understanding the conflict lies in the unique history of Arakan, a medieval kingdom located at the edge of south Asia which became a province of Burma only after the Burmese invasion in 1784. While the Arakan Yoma mountain range creates a formidable barrier with the rest of Burma, Arakan is separated from the Chittagong region of Bangladesh only by the Naf river. “People have been moving in both directions across the Naf throughout history,” said Pamela Gutman, an academic at the University of Sydney, who is the author of several books on ancient Arakan. Although Islam came to the region through Arab traders in the 8th century, and the presence of Muslims in medieval Arakan is well documented, there is some evidence that the Brahmanic people from Bengal may have established an ancient kingdom named Vaishali in north Arakan long before then. The Rohingya say they have inhabited the area of western Burma for centuries, pointing to the etymological link of Rohingya-Rakhine-Arakan. But in 1982, Burma passed a controversial law that stripped them of citizenship, in effect turning them into the “Roma of Asia”. About a quarter of them 200,000 people have crossed into Bangladesh in recent years to escape repression in Burma where the army has been accused of carrying out persecution since 1978.
Perhaps the most graphic example of regional indifference to their plight was the incident four years ago in which the Thai military was accused of intercepting boatloads of migrants in the Andaman Sea, only to leave hundreds of them to perish on the water.

5 COMMENTS

  1. Hello,
    I am from Yangon (formerly known as Rangoon) and a Muslim. We do not have Rohingya in our ethnic minority. They came from Bangladesh, crossed the border illegally and they started calling themselves as Rohingya in early 1970.
    They speak Bengali, they trade arms from across the bangladesh border.
    Either they live in our country as Refugee or they must go back to the country they belong to.
    This is the only solution for them.

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