‘Rohingya crisis’ is a much bandied phrase these days. Since June
this year, arbitrary arrests, disappearances, burnings, beatings, rapes,
killings and other forms of persecution against this most marginalised
group have led to human rights and humanitarian crises which have
tainted the landscape of Rakhine State in Western Burma and given
substance to the term. In order to understand how these developments
have come to pass, we need to consider the narrative built around the
crisis by three groupings of international actors – the Burmese
government, host countries for Rohingya who have fled and the
international community at large. Amidst the jockeying for position in
the discourse – and opportunities to define it – the human impact of the
crisis appears to have been relegated to the background. As a result,
it seems that we are no closer to a solution that is just and equitable
and that respects the human rights of the Rohingya.
In the context of the Rohingya crisis, the international community at large comprises two main interest groups – the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)
and what can loosely be termed as the western block (the EU, US and
Australia etc.). These countries have varying degrees of interest in the
Rohingya issue specifically and conflicting economic and geo-political
interests in Burma more widely. According to their narratives, the
Rohingya are clear victims both within Burma and (to a lesser extent) in
the countries to which they flee. A sub-text to the western block
version of this narrative is that the Burmese democratic transition
process is also suffering because of this and other ‘communal conflicts’
in Burma.
According to the narrative of Bangladesh, Malaysia, Thailand and
other countries which host large numbers of Rohingya refugees, the
‘crisis’ endures because of the lack of straightforward solutions to the
problem. Burma is responsible, but the Rohingya are both victim (inside
Burma) and burden (in their own countries). It must be noted that
Bangladesh and Malaysia are also member states of the OIC.
Burma views the crisis as one caused by the existence of these unwanted people and their encroachment into its territory.
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