The Southeast Asian body vows to monitor the plight of the ethnic group unwanted in Burma and Bangladesh.
The head of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) raised
the issue of the Rohingyas with the top diplomats of Burma and
Bangladesh on Friday, vowing to monitor the Muslim ethnic group unwanted
by both countries.
ASEAN Secretary-General Surin Pitsuwan has
taken “a personal interest” in the Rohingyas and had spoken directly to
Burmese and Bangladeshi representatives during a meeting of the
grouping’s foreign ministers in Cambodia’s Phnom Penh this week,
according to the ASEAN website.
Both Burmese Foreign Minister
Wunna Maung Lwin and his Bangladeshi counterpart Dipu Moni agreed to
cooperate and keep ASEAN informed on the status of the ethnic group
following deadly ethnic violence between Rohingyas and Buddhist Rakhines
in western Burma in June.
"We will keep our eyes and ears on
the plight of these unfortunate people," Surin said on completion of the
ASEAN meeting and talks between ASEAN ministers and their foreign
counterparts.
He said he appreciated the concern of the ASEAN
people for the “sufferings” of the Rohingyas, who number around 800,000
in Burma and are considered to be some of the world's most persecuted
minorities.
Aside from Burma, Rohingyas also live as migrant
workers in many of the other ASEAN states—Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Burmese
President Thein Sein had requested the United Nations refugee agency
this week place Rohingyas in refugee camps or send them out of the
country. His request was immediately refused by the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Many of Burma’s Rohingyas
have lived in the country for generations, but Thein Sein said that the
ethnic minority is made up of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and
that “we cannot accept them here.”
Bangladesh, where an
estimated 300,000 Rohingyas live, has turned back boatloads of the
oppressed group arriving on its shores since the outbreak of the unrest.
U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was also in Phnom Penh this
week attending the ASEAN meeting, met with Thein Sein in Siem Reap ahead
of a U.S.-ASEAN business forum and raised the issue of the Rohingyas
with the Burmese leader, officials said.
A senior State
Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that
Clinton stressed Washington’s willingness “to be supportive of help with
internally displaced people (IDP),” referring to the Muslim ethnic
group.
The official said that Thein Sein had not responded
directly, other than to say that the general situation with regard to
the Rohingyas had been “very dangerous for the country” and that Burma
“needed continued help and support with IDPs.”
“They talked
about the situation … He talked about how difficult it had been. She
offered that if more support was needed with IDPs that we could be
supportive,” the official said.
UN Request
Violence
between Rohingyas and the Rakhines that flared in June has left some 78
people dead and 90,000 displaced and living in camps, according to
government statistics.
The clashes were sparked after an ethnic
Rakhine woman was allegedly raped and killed by three Rohingya men in
late May. On June 3, a group of Rakhine vigilantes attacked and killed
10 Rohingyas on a bus they believed were responsible for the woman’s
death.
On June 8, thousands of Rohingyas rioted in Maungdaw,
destroying Rakhine property, burning homes, and causing an unknown
number of deaths. In the aftermath, Rohingyas carried out similar
attacks on Rakhines elsewhere around the state.
ASEAN foreign
ministers had earlier tasked the ASEAN Secretariat to monitor the
situation of the Rohingyas and keep them updated after thousands were
turned away from countries where they sought asylum.
According
to the UNHCR, around one million Rohingyas are now thought to live
outside Burma, but they have not been welcomed by a third country.
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