This is rich! UAE calls on Buddhist Burma to treat Muslim Rohingya better
Posted by Ann Corcoran on September 29, 2013Hey here is an idea, maybe rather than shoving the minority Muslim population down the throats of the Burmese, the rich United Arab Emirates could welcome the Rohingya to the UAE—but, oops! the UAE doesn't take refugees!
Monks protest against the Organization of Islamic Cooperation! Imagine if we had such brave people!
From WAM.org:
WAM NEW YORK, 28th September 2013 (WAM)– The UAE has expressed concern over the acts of violence which target the Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar, and demanded the international community encourage the government of Myanmar to carry out its duty to put an end to these acts which contradict the basic principles of human rights, as well as to help the Rohingya restore their rights as a Muslim Minority in Myanmar.
The UAE also re-affirmed that it will continue to provide humanitarian aid to the victims of violence in Myanmar and to defend the legitimate rights of the Muslim minority in the country.
This came in the UAE's statement at the meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Contact Group on Rohingya, held in New York, USA, under the chairmanship of Prof. Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, the Secretary General of OIC, on the margins of the 68th United Nations General Assembly.
I think the OIC is still smarting from being banned by Burma. They wanted to get into Burma (aka Myanmar) to supposedly inspect living conditions for Rohingya. I expect they wanted-in to help agitate and stir up more tension.Let's all encourage those rich Muslim countries to do THEIR share by welcoming their fellow Muslims to their cities!
See our entire Rohingya Reports category (155 previous posts!). US Resettlement contractors want more Rohingya to resettle in America.
Birth control for Rohingyas
Sajidul Haque, bdnews24.com
Published: 2013-09-21 17:07:43.0 BdST Updated: 2013-09-21 18:37:54.0 BdST
A parliamentary panel has recommended special birth control measures for Rohingya refugee families in Bangladesh who want bigger family members to secure more rations.
Children born in these families in the Cox's Bazar refugee camps get full rations after birth.
The standing committee on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has recommended stopping rations for children after the first two.
Panel members, after a visit to the Kutupalang camp at Ukhiya on Aug 17 and 18, say the problem is worsening as the Myanmar Rohingyas are outnumbering the locals with each passing day.
ফাইল ছবি
Muslim Rohingya influx started in the 1980s due to political instability in Myanmar.
The government estimates around 30,000 Rohingyas are currently staying in the two camps in Cox's Bazar.
It is believed that around half a million undocumented Rohingyas are staying in Bangladesh or have migrated to other countries from here.
Myanmar has ignored repeated calls by Bangladesh to take back its citizens.
Dhaka claims the illegal Rohingyas are involved with various criminal activities.
They have also been caught while accepting fake Bangladeshi passports.
Parliamentary panel's chief Nilufar Zafar Ullah, Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, and committee member Nazma Akter visited the Rohingya camps to see for themselves the problem on ground.
The committee on Sept 18 submitted a report, a copy of which is available with bdnews24.com.
It says the number of Rohingyas are increasing in comparison to the locals.
Each registered refugee gets 12 kg rice each month. They are not interested in birth control as a child gets full ration from the day it is born.
Panel members found families with as many 18 members.
Speaking to bdnews24.com, Nilufer Zafar Ullah said the Rohingya population was on the rise since they get ration.
"One of the problem is their outnumbering the locals and so, birth control measures have been recommended," she said.
According to the report, 58 percent of 30,000 Rohingyas at the two camps were born in Bangladesh.
There are 23 schools in the camps and the committee said the refugees were getting 'better' facilities than the locals.
Emphasising on the repatriation of the Rohingyas, Nilufer said, the refugees wanted to go back to their country. She said stakeholders had been asked to hold talks to send them back to Myanmar.
The standing committee on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has recommended stopping rations for children after the first two.
Panel members, after a visit to the Kutupalang camp at Ukhiya on Aug 17 and 18, say the problem is worsening as the Myanmar Rohingyas are outnumbering the locals with each passing day.
ফাইল ছবি
The government estimates around 30,000 Rohingyas are currently staying in the two camps in Cox's Bazar.
It is believed that around half a million undocumented Rohingyas are staying in Bangladesh or have migrated to other countries from here.
Myanmar has ignored repeated calls by Bangladesh to take back its citizens.
Dhaka claims the illegal Rohingyas are involved with various criminal activities.
They have also been caught while accepting fake Bangladeshi passports.
Parliamentary panel's chief Nilufar Zafar Ullah, Foreign Minister Dipu Moni, and committee member Nazma Akter visited the Rohingya camps to see for themselves the problem on ground.
The committee on Sept 18 submitted a report, a copy of which is available with bdnews24.com.
It says the number of Rohingyas are increasing in comparison to the locals.
Each registered refugee gets 12 kg rice each month. They are not interested in birth control as a child gets full ration from the day it is born.
Panel members found families with as many 18 members.
Speaking to bdnews24.com, Nilufer Zafar Ullah said the Rohingya population was on the rise since they get ration.
"One of the problem is their outnumbering the locals and so, birth control measures have been recommended," she said.
According to the report, 58 percent of 30,000 Rohingyas at the two camps were born in Bangladesh.
There are 23 schools in the camps and the committee said the refugees were getting 'better' facilities than the locals.
Emphasising on the repatriation of the Rohingyas, Nilufer said, the refugees wanted to go back to their country. She said stakeholders had been asked to hold talks to send them back to Myanmar.
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