The
Genocide of the Rohingya: Big Oil, Failed
Democracy and False Prophets
By Ramzy
Baroud
September
12, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- To a certain extent, Aung San Suu Kyi is a
false prophet. Glorified by the west for many
years, she was made a ‘democracy icon’ because
she opposed the same forces in her country,
Burma, at the time that the US-led western
coalition isolated Rangoon for its alliance with
China.
Aung
San Suu Kyi played her role as expected, winning
the approval of the Right and the admiration of
the Left. And for that, she won a
Nobel Peace Prize
in 1991; she joined the elevated group of ‘The
Elders’ and was promoted by many in the media
and various governments as a heroic figure, to
be emulated.
Hillary Clinton
once
described her
as “this extraordinary woman.” The ‘Lady’ of
Burma’s journey from being a political pariah in
her own country, where she was placed under
house arrest for 15 years, finally ended in
triumph when she became the leader of Burma
following a multi-party election in 2015. Since
then, she has toured many countries, dined with
queens and presidents, given memorable speeches,
received awards, while knowingly rebranding the
very brutal military that she had opposed
throughout the years. (Even today, the Burmese
military has a near-veto power over all aspects
of government.)
But the great
‘humanitarian’ seems to have run out of
integrity as her government, military and police
began conducting a widespread
ethnic cleansing
operation that targeted the ‘most oppressed
people on earth’, the Rohingya. These
defenseless people have been subjected to a
brutal and systematic genocide, conducted
through a joint effort by the Burmese military,
police and majority Buddhist nationalists.
The so-called
“Cleansing Operations” have killed hundreds of
Rohingya in recent months, driving over
250,000 crying,
frightened and hungry people to escape for their
lives in any way possible. Hundreds more have
perished at sea,
or hunted down and killed in jungles.
Stories of murder
and mayhem remind one of the ethnic cleansing of
the Palestinian people during the Nakba of 1948.
It should come as no surprise that Israel is one
of the
biggest suppliers of weapons
to the Burmese military. Despite an extended
arms embargo on Burma by many countries,
Israel’s Defense Minister, Avigdor Lieberman,
insists that his country has no intentions of
halting its weapons shipments to the despicable
regime in Rangoon, which is actively using these
weapons against its own minorities, not only
Muslims in the western Rakhine state but also
Christians in the north.
One of the Israeli
shipments was announced in August 2016 by the
Israeli company
TAR Ideal Concepts.
The company proudly featured that its Corner
Shot rifles are already in ‘operational use’ by
the Burmese military.
Israel’s history is
rife with examples
of backing brutal juntas and authoritarian
regimes, but why are those who have positioned
themselves as the guardians of democracy still
silent about the bloodbath in Burma?
Nearly a
quarter of the Rohingya population has already
been driven out of their homes since October
last year. The rest could follow in the near
future, thus making the collective crime almost
irreversible.
Aung
San Suu Kyi did not even have the moral courage
to say a few words of sympathy to the victims.
Instead, she could only express an
uncommitted statement:
“we have to take care of everybody who is in our
country”. Meanwhile, her spokesperson and other
mouthpieces launched a campaign of vilification
against Rohingya, accusing them of burning their
own villages, fabricating their own rape
stories, while referring to Rohingya who dare to
resist as ‘Jihadists‘,
hoping to link the ongoing genocide with the
western-infested campaign aimed at vilifying
Muslims everywhere.
But well-documented
reports give us more than a glimpse of the
harrowing reality experienced by the Rohingya. A
recent
UN report
details the account of one woman, whose husband
had been killed by soldiers in what the UN
described as “widespread as well as systematic”
attacks that “very likely commission of
crimes against humanity.”
“Five of them took
off my clothes and raped me,” said the
bereaved woman.
“My eight-month-old son was crying of hunger
when they were in my house because he wanted to
breastfeed, so to silence him they killed him
with a knife.”
Fleeing refugees
that made it to Bangladesh following a
nightmarish journey spoke of the
murder of children,
the rape of women and the burning of villages.
Some of these accounts have been verified
through satellite images
provided by Human Rights Watch,
showing wiped out villages throughout the state.
Certainly,
the horrible fate of the Rohingya is not
entirely new. But what makes it particularity
pressing is that the west is now fully on the
side of the very government that is carrying out
these atrocious acts.
And there
is a reason for that: Oil.
Reporting from
Ramree Island,
Hereward Holland
wrote on the ‘hunting for Myanmar’s (Burma)
hidden treasure.’
Massive
deposits of oil that have remained untapped due
to decades of western boycott of the junta
government are now available to the highest
bidder. It is a big oil bonanza, and all are
invited. Shell, ENI, Total, Chevron and many
others are investing large sums to exploit the
country’s natural resources, while the Chinese –
who dominated Burma’s economy for many years –
are being slowly pushed out
Indeed,
the rivalry over Burma’s unexploited wealth is
at its peak in decades. It is this wealth – and
the need to undermine China’s superpower status
in Asia – that has brought the west back,
installed Aung San Suu Kyi as a leader in a
country that has never fundamentally changed,
but only rebranded itself to pave the road for
the return of ‘Big Oil’.
However,
the Rohingya are paying the price.
Do not let
Burmese official propaganda mislead you. The
Rohingya are not foreigners, intruders or
immigrants in Burma.
Their
kingdom of Arakan
dates back to the 8th Century. In the centuries
that followed, the inhabitants of that kingdom
learned about Islam from Arab traders and, with
time, it became a Muslim-majority region. Arakan
is Burma’s modern-day Rakhine state, where most
of the country’s estimated 1.2 million Rohingya
still live.
The false
notion that the Rohingya are outsiders started
in 1784 when the Burmese King conquered Arakan
and forced hundreds of thousands to flee. Many
of those who were forced out of their homes to
Bengal, eventually returned.
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Attacks on
Rohingya, and constant attempts at driving them
out of Rakhine, have been renewed over several
periods of history, for example: following the
Japanese defeat of British forces stationed in
Burma in 1942; in 1948; following the takeover
of Burma by the Army in 1962; as a result of
so-called ‘Operation Dragon King’ in 1977, where
the military junta forcefully drove over 200,000
Rohingya out of their homes to Bangladesh, and
so on.
In 1982, the
military government passed the
Citizenship Law
that stripped most Rohingya of their
citizenship, declaring them illegal in their own
country.
The war on the
Rohingya began again in 2012. Every single
episode, since then, has followed a typical
narrative: ‘communal clashes’ between Buddhist
nationals and Rohingya, often leading to tens of
thousands of the latter group being chased out
to the Bay of Bengal, to the jungles and, those
who survive, to
refugee camps.
Amid international
silence, only few respected figures like
Pope Francis spoke out
in support of the Rohingya in a deeply moving
prayer last February.
The
Rohingya are ‘good people’, the Pope said. “They
are peaceful people, and they are our brothers
and sisters.” His call for justice was never
heeded.
Arab and Muslim
countries remained largely silent, despite
public outcry
to do something to end the genocide.
Reporting from
Sittwe, the capital of Rakhine, veteran British
journalist, Peter Oborne,
described what
he has seen in an article published by the Daily
Mail on September 4:
Just
five years ago, an estimated 50,000 of the
city’s population of around 180,000 were
members of the local Rohingya Muslim ethnic
group. Today, there are fewer than 3,000
left. And they are not free to walk the
streets. They are crammed into a tiny ghetto
surrounded by barbed wire. Armed guards
prevent visitors from entering — and will
not allow the Rohingya Muslims to leave.
With
access to that reality through their many
emissaries on the ground, western government
knew too well of the indisputable facts, but
ignored them, anyway.
When US, European
and Japanese corporations lined up to exploit
the treasures of Burma, all they needed was the
nod of approval
from the US government. The Barack Obama
Administration hailed Burma’s ‘opening’ even
before the 2015 elections brought Aung San Suu
Kyi and her National League for Democracy to
power. After that date, Burma has become another
American ‘success story’, oblivious, of course,
to the facts that a genocide has been under way
in that country for years.
The
violence in Burma is likely to escalate and
reach other ASEAN countries, simply because the
two main ethnic and religious groups in these
countries are dominated and almost evenly split
between Buddhists and Muslims.
The triumphant
return of the US-west to exploit Burma’s wealth
and the US-Chinese rivalries is likely to
complicate the situation even further, if ASEAN
does not end its
appalling silence
and move with a determined strategy to pressure
Burma to end its genocide of the Rohingya.
People around the
world must
take a stand.
Religious communities should speak out. Human
rights groups should do more to document the
crimes of the Burmese government and hold to
account those who supply them with weapons.
It is the
least we expect from the man who stood up to
Apartheid in his own country, and penned the
famous words: “If you are neutral in situations
of injustice, you have chosen the side of the
oppressor.”
Dr.
Ramzy Baroud is
a US-Arab journalist, media consultant, an
author, internationally-syndicated columnist,
Editor of Palestine Chronicle (1999-present),
former Managing Editor of London-based Middle
East Eye (2014-15), former Editor-in-Chief of
The Brunei Times, former Deputy Managing Editor
of Al Jazeera online.
http://www.ramzybaroud.net
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