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 Democracy and Slaughter in Burma:  Gold Rush Overrides Human 
	  Rights  By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 23, 2012    The widespread killings of Rohingya Muslims in Burma – or Myanmar 
	  - have received only passing and dispassionate coverage in most media. 
	  What they actually warrant is widespread outrage and decisive efforts to 
	  bring further human rights abuses to an immediate halt.
 
 “Burmese 
	  helicopter set fire to three boats carrying nearly 50 Muslim Rohingyas 
	  fleeing sectarian violence in western Burma in an attack that is believed 
	  to have killed everyone on board,” reported Radio Free Europe on July 12.
 
 Why would anyone take such fatal risks? Refugees are attempting 
	  to escape imminent death, torture or arrest at the hands of the Ethnic 
	  Buddhist Rakhine majority, which has the full support of the Burmese 
	  government.
 
 The relatively little media interest in Burma’s 
	  ‘ethnic clashes’ is by no means an indication of the significance of the 
	  story. The recent flaring of violence followed the raping and killing of a 
	  Rhakine woman on May 28, allegedly by three Rohingya men. The incident 
	  ushered a rare movement of unity between many sectors of Burmese society, 
	  including the government, security forces and so-called pro-democracy 
	  activists and groups. The first order of business was the beating to death 
	  of ten innocent Muslims. The victims, who were dragged out of a bus and 
	  attacked by a mob of 300 strong Buddhist Rhakine, were not even Rohingyas, 
	  according to the Bangkok Post (June 22). Not all Muslims in Burma are from 
	  the Rohingya ethnic group. Some are descendants of Indian immigrants, some 
	  have Chinese ancestry, and some even have early Arab and Persian origins. 
	  Burma is a country with a population of an estimated 60 million, only 4 
	  percent of whom are Muslim.
 
 Regardless of numbers, the abuses are 
	  widespread and rioters are facing little or no repercussions for their 
	  actions. “The Rohingyas…face some of the worst discrimination in the 
	  world,” reported Reuters on July 4, citing rights groups. UK-based Equal 
	  Rights Trust indicated that the recent violence is not merely due to 
	  ethnic clashes, but actually involves active government participation. 
	  “From June 16 onwards, the military became more actively involved in 
	  committing acts of violence and other human rights abuses against the 
	  Rohingya including killings and mass-scale arrests of Rohingya men and 
	  boys in North Rakhine State.”
 
 The ‘pro-democracy’ Burmese groups 
	  and individuals celebrated by Western governments for objecting to the 
	  country’s military junta are also taking part in the war against 
	  minorities. Writing in the Sydney Morning Herald on July 8, Hanna 
	  Hindstrom reported that one pro-democracy group stated on Twitter that 
	  “[t]he so-called Rohingya are liars,” while another social media user 
	  said, “We must kill all the kalar.” Kalar is a racist slur applied to 
	  dark-skinned people from the Indian subcontinent
 
 Politically, 
	  Burma has a poor reputation. A protracted civil war has ravaged the 
	  country shortly after its independence from Britain in 1948. The colonial 
	  era was exceptionally destructive as the country was used as a 
	  battleground for great powers. Many Burmese were slaughtered in a 
	  situation that was not of their making. As foreign powers divided the 
	  country according to their own purposes, an ensuing civil war was almost 
	  predictable. It supposedly ended when a military junta took over from 1962 
	  to 2011, but many of the underlying problems remained unresolved.
 
 Per western media coverage, Burma is defined by a few ‘iconic’ 
	  individuals’ quest for democracy, notwithstanding opposition leader Aung 
	  San Suu Kyi. Since an election last year brought a civilian government to 
	  power, we have been led to believe that a happy ending is now in the 
	  making. “Burma opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi made her historic 
	  parliamentary debut on Monday (July 9), marking a new phase in her near 
	  quarter century struggle to bring democracy to her army-dominated 
	  homeland,” reported the British Telegraph.
 
 But aside from mere 
	  ‘concerns’ over the ethnic violence, Aung San Suu Kyi is staying on the 
	  fence - as if the slaughter of the country’s ‘dark-skinned Indians’ is not 
	  as urgent as having a parliamentary representation for her party, the 
	  National League for Democracy in Burma. Secretary General of the 
	  Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu called on 
	  ‘The Lady’ to do something, anything. “As a Nobel Peace Laureate, we are 
	  confident that the first step of your journey towards ensuring peace in 
	  the world would start from your own doorstep and that you would play a 
	  positive role in bringing an end to the violence that has afflicted Arakan 
	  State,” he wrote. However, “Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for 
	  Democracy continues to carefully sidestep the hot-button issue,” according 
	  to Foreign Policy.
 
 The violent targeting of Burmese minorities 
	  arrived at an interesting time for the US and Britain. Their pro-democracy 
	  campaign was largely called off when the junta agreed to provide 
	  semi-democratic reforms. Eager to offset the near exclusive Chinese 
	  influence over the Burmese economy, Western companies jumped into Burma as 
	  if one of the most oppressive regimes in the world was suddenly 
	  resurrected into an oasis for democracy.
 
 “The gold rush for Burma 
	  has begun,” wrote Alex Spillius in the British Guardian. It was ushered in 
	  by US President Barak Obama’s recent lifting of the ban on American 
	  investment in the country. Britain immediately followed suit, as a UK 
	  trade office was hurriedly opened in Rangoon on July 11. “Its aim is to 
	  forge links with one of the last unexploited markets in Asia, a country 
	  blessed by ample resources of hydro-carbons, minerals, gems and timber, 
	  not to mention a cheap labour force, which thanks to years of isolation 
	  and sanctions is near virgin territory for foreign investors.” Since US 
	  Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made her ‘historic’ visit to Burma in 
	  December 2011, a recurring media theme has been ‘Burma riches’ and the 
	  ‘race for Burma’. Little else is being discussed, and certainly not 
	  minority rights.
 
 Recently, Clinton held a meeting with Burma’s 
	  President Thein Sein, who is now being branded as another success story 
	  for US diplomacy. On the agenda are US concerns regarding the “lack of 
	  transparency in Burma's investment environment and the military's role in 
	  the economy” (CNN, July 12). Thein Sein, however, is guilty of much 
	  greater sins, for he is providing a dangerous political discourse that 
	  could possibly lead to more killings, or even genocide. The ‘reformist’ 
	  president told the UN that “refugee camps or deportation is the solution 
	  for nearly a million Rohingya Muslims,” according to ABC Australia. He 
	  offered to send the Rohingyas away “if any third country would accept 
	  them.”
 
 The Rohingyas are currently undergoing one of the most 
	  violent episodes of their history, and their suffering is one of the most 
	  pressing issues anywhere in the world. Yet their plight is suspiciously 
	  absent from regional and international priorities, or is undercut by 
	  giddiness over the country’s “ample resources of hydro-carbons, minerals, 
	  gems and timber.”
 
 Meanwhile, the stateless and defenseless 
	  Rohingyas continue to suffer and die. Those lucky to make it to Bangladesh 
	  are being turned back. Aside from few courageous journalists – indifferent 
	  to the country’s promise for ‘democracy’ and other fables – most are 
	  simply looking the other way. This tragic attitude must immediately change 
	  if human rights matter in the least.
 
 - RamzyBaroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	  is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	  PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom 
	  Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London.)
 
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