Photo: Kyle Knight/IRIN. Recent arrivals are particularly pessimistic
Source: IRIN
COX'S BAZAR, 13 November 2013 (IRIN) - Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
who fled sectarian violence in neighbouring Myanmar in 2012 have little
faith in the much heralded democratic reforms taking place at home.
"We have been suffering for generations," Muhammad Zakaria, 31, who fled
his home in Myanmar's western Rakhine State after the first wave of
sectarian violence between Buddhists and Muslims in June 2012, told
IRIN.
"Dating back to my grandfather's time, we haven't found peace. So I'm
not really sure if any of these reforms happen it will bring peace."
Rohingyas,
an ethnic, linguistic and religious (Muslim) minority numbering some
800,000 in Rakhine, have long faced persecution and discrimination in
Myanmar.
In Myanmar they are de jure stateless and considered undocumented immigrants.
According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 180,000 people are in need in Rakhine State.
Of these, 140,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs), the vast majority
Rohingyas, are living in dozens of camps and camp-like settings, with
close to 40,000 others living in isolated and remote host communities in
Minbya, Myebon, Pauktaw, Mrauk-U, Kyauktaw and Sittwe townships.
Many face severe restrictions on their movements, leaving them excluded
from local markets, schools and income-generating activities.
Tensions continue
Inter-communal tensions between Rohingyas and ethic Rakhine (Buddhist) residents have continued to simmer since 2012.
On 2 November, a group of Rohingya IDPs were attacked by Buddhist
Rakhine residents while collecting firewood outside the Sin Tat Maw IDP
camp in Pauktaw Township, resulting in at least two deaths, with several
others injured; Pauktaw is still tense.
Seven people were also killed after a dispute between a Kaman* shop
owner and Rakhine motorcycle taxi driver in Thandwe Township, in
southwestern Rakhine between 29 September and 2 October 2013.
Since 2012, thousands of Rohingyas have reportedly fled the country,
mostly to neighbouring Bangladesh, though no exact figures are
available. There they joined more than 200,000 Rohingya refugees who
fled decades earlier and are mostly undocumented.
On 5 November
the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) called on the Burmese government and the
international community to do more to promote reconciliation and
coexistence in Rakhine after dozens of Rohingyas lost their lives trying
to flee Myanmar by boat.
"As with recent boat disasters on the Mediterranean,
UNHCR's worry is that similar tragedies will follow unless actions are
taken by concerned countries to address the causes and reduce the risks
for those involved in dangerous journeys by sea," Adrian Edwards, an
agency spokesperson, told reporters. "2013 is by all accounts one of the
worst years in terms of deadly incidents at sea."
Life in Burma for Rohingyas is not easy.
"These days in Burma just going from one school to another, going from
one village to another, going from one door to another we need a paper,"
said Zakaria, recalling the restrictions on Rohingya movements.
Rahima Fatun, 40, who fled Myanmar after the June 2012 violence, said
she ran through the jungle with two other women, who were allegedly shot
and killed by border police, to reach Bangladesh.
"We left because there was so much pain for us - we could not move, even
as the country was developing. We could not go from one place to
another," she said.
Democratic reform and peace hopes for Rakhine State have been dashed by
the continued political campaign against Rohingyas, including, according
to a 2013 Human Rights Watch (HRW) report, "the statements and actions of some of Burma's prominent democracy activists, including opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi".
Asked about her faith in the potential for peace between Muslims and
Buddhists in Myanmar, Fatun said: "If Aung San Suu Kyi were a Muslim,
only then would I feel that something good would happen - I wish she was
a Muslim, then we could know for sure that she would help us."
Security reforms or cosmetic change?
Earlier this year, the Burmese government disbanded Nasaka, a
controversial security force charged with patrolling the border and,
according to the International Crisis Group (ICG), "enforcing the various discriminatory policies against the Rohingya".
"No other existing agency is likely to have the power and the reach of
the Nasaka, and its abolition should reduce the level of abuse faced by
the Rohingya," wrote ICG.
But not everyone is convinced.
"Even if they removed the Nasaka from Rakhine, it's just an eyewash, nothing will actually change," Zakaria said, echoing an HRW statement indicating that Nasaka's demise was a "smokescreen".
"It has to come from the international community," said Zakaria. "If
different countries pressure the government enough, then something good
might happen. Other than that I don't see any hope for the Rohingya."
Two bouts of inter-communal violence
between Buddhist ethnic Rakhine residents and Muslim Rohingyas in June
and October 2012 left 167 people dead and more than 10,000 homes and
buildings destroyed.
*The 1982 Myanmar citizenship law recognizes the Muslim Kaman population as one of the country's 135 official ethnic groups.