President Thein Sein will not allow the opening of an office in
the country "because it is not in accordance with the people's desires,"
said an official from the president’s office on Monday.
Ten Sein
made the decision after thousands of monks took to the streets in
several cities to protest against his willingness to help Rohingya
Muslims in the crisis-stricken Rakhine state in the west.
Shouting and holding banners reading "No OIC", the protesters said they would not accept any OIC office in the country.
Rohingya
Muslims are currently under a brutal siege by the extremist Buddhists
in the areas of the state capital Sittwe as well as the city of Maungdaw
in the Rakhine state, according to recent reports.
Reports also
say some 650 Rohingyas have been killed in the Rakhine state in the
recent months. This is while 1,200 others are missing and some 80,000
more have been displaced.
The Buddhist-majority government of
Myanmar refuses to recognize Rohingyas and has classified them as
illegal migrants, even though they are said to be Muslim descendants of
Persian, Turkish, Bengali, and Pathan origin, who migrated to Myanmar as
early as the 8th century.
According to reports, thousands of
Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims are living in dire conditions in refugee
camps after government forces and Buddhist extremists started burning
down their villages on August 10.
The UN human rights authorities
blame Myanmar’s security forces for the violence, who are believed to
have been targeting the Muslims rather than bringing the ethnic violence
to an end in the country.
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