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            Myanmar Communal Violence- a Set back to Democratic Process 
            
            
            Thursday April 04, 2013 07:37:44 PM, 
            Ram Puniyani |  
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              Most of the countries of South Asia 
              have faced the barbaric problem of violence targeted against 
              religious minorities. The form of this may have been different, 
              but the outcome has been similar, the brutality against religious 
              minorities, violence against innocent human beings. The current 
              times (Mid 2013) may be one of the worst when in the spate of 
              short span of we are witness to violence in Pakistan, Bangla Desh, 
              India and Myanmar, more or less running parallel. Many a times 
              when talk about violence involving Muslims has been under 
              discussion, some propagandists have tried to associate Islam with 
              violence and so the strife. Similarly some others may say that 
              Hinduism permits violence as in Gita or so and so is the problem. 
              In popular perception Buddhism is the religion of peace. The truth 
              is that while the religious precepts are for morality, the part of 
              religion invoked for violence has more to do with contemporary 
              political issues, which are given the garb of religion. While Lord 
              Gautama Buddha is surely the major apostle of peace, one has seen 
              violence by Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka, Thailand and now overtly 
              in Myanmar (March 2013).
 Troops are keeping a vigil, martial law has been declared to stop 
              the communal rage which has lasted for three days in Meikhatila in 
              Myanmar. This violence has involved the Buddhists and Muslims. 
              Here the official toll stands at 31 dead, while the unofficial 
              figures are higher. A state of emergency has been declared in this 
              state. As usual a trivial incident involving the argument between 
              the Buddhist couple and a Muslim owner of gold shop resulted in 
              the triggering of simmering dislikes and discord between these two 
              communities resulting in violence. While one Buddhist monk has 
              also been killed the major victims of the violence are Muslims. 
              This bring to our memory the communal clash of June -July (2012) 
              in Rakhine State in western Myanmar. In that violence officially 
              110 people were killed and it left 120,000 people homeless. Those 
              killed and left homeless were mostly stateless Rohingya Muslims.
 
 Interestingly the communal strife was under the wraps during the 
              preceding dictatorial regime. With the efforts to bring in 
              democracy in some form these strife’s are coming to surface due to 
              the diverse and plural nature of Myanmar society, which is 
              majority Buddhist but has substantial number of Muslim minorities. 
              Rohingiya Muslims are probably the most persecuted minority in the 
              world. Being a substantial number in Myanmar, they are from 
              Indo-Aryan group, who settled in this part over a period of last 
              couple of centuries, during the British rule, primarily. While the 
              majority Buddhists are of Sino-Tibetan stock. Muslims live in the 
              Western state of Rakhine state on country’s Western border. They 
              have been adversely affected by the 1982 citizenship law, which 
              has deprived them of the citizenship; there is a total violation 
              of their human rights due to this unjust law. They are subjected 
              to forced labour and have to work for the Government without any 
              pay. The UNHCR has noted that since 1991 their freedom of movement 
              is restricted. They are treated like second class citizens. Facing 
              this adverse situation of gross violation of their rights many of 
              them are trying to flee to Thailand, Malaysia and other places 
              amongst others.
 
 In 2012, June-July the violence between Rakhine Buddhists and 
              Rohingya Muslims was triggered by the rumour of rape of a Buddhist 
              girl. As such it was a case of Muslim boy and Buddhist girl 
              falling in love and eloping to get married. The boy was murdered 
              and two of his friends who helped him to elope are facing death 
              sentence.
 
 Overall this reflects the unsolved problem of secularization and 
              democracy in the region. The common factor in whole of South Asia 
              is the migration of people for economic reasons, and with 
              independence coming many of the dominating communities wanted to 
              associate citizenship rights based on religion. Due to this some 
              communities got deprived of citizenship formally or informally. 
              Some were relegated to second class citizenship in practice. In 
              Sri Lanka, the large number of Tamils who had gone there as 
              plantation labour was denied equal rights and denied equality 
              leading the extreme reaction in the form of formation of 
              Liberation Tiger of Tamil Elam (LTTE).
 
 In Myanmar 5% of the people are Muslims. Many of them had been the 
              residents of this region from centuries. Denying them full 
              citizenship defies all the logic of a modern democratic state. 
              During the regime of military junta, which ruled the country for 
              decades, a wrong precedent has been set, that of linking 
              citizenship with religion. It requires deeper investigation as to 
              why many a monks have an anti Islamic attitude. One knows 
              similarly many a monks had played anti-Tamil role in Sri Lanka. 
              There must be deeper societal processes which are at work and are 
              usurping the democratic norms of equality of religions. One knows 
              that democracy is coming up in Myanmar after long decades after 
              long battles, but still the remnants of the communal divide are 
              dogging this nascent democracy. In a way this is also the colonial 
              legacy which subtly promoted the divisiveness in the society.
 
 With this violence in Myanmar coming to the fore the whole South 
              Asia has to wake up and come to the grips of the legacy of the 
              colonial past, a legacy perpetuated due to economic and political 
              policies of rulers, rulers who have in a short-sighted manner 
              resorted to abuse of religious identity for their political goals. 
              Some political tendencies have thrived on the identity of 
              religions and spread the ‘Hate’ about ‘other’ community. It is 
              retarding the process of development in each of South Asian 
              countries and also putting strong brakes on the same. South Asia 
              should have been striving towards the process of formation of 
              South Asian Federation, which can expedite the processes leading 
              to peace in the sub continent. Regional peace in turn is a 
              prerequisite for development of the regions. We need to look 
              beyond the narrow religious identities and promote the freedom of 
              religion, equality of religions and dignity and honour for people 
              of all the faiths for a better environment in those countries and 
              a more congenial atmosphere for enhancement of human rights of 
              weaker sections of society.
 
              
 
 
              
 
                
                
              
              
 
 
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