Saturday 20 July 2013

Breakingnews > Myanmar lifts emergency

 credit-Bangkok Post
Published: 20 Jul 2013 at 13.42
YANGON - Myanmar on Saturday lifted a state of emergency imposed four months ago in the Mandalay region to control sectarian violence that claimed at least 44 lives.
President Thein Sein said "peace and stability has already been restored" in the townships of Meiktila, Mahlaing, Wundwin and Thazi in the central Meiktila District, in a statement oublished in The New Light of Myanmar newspaper.

The move came as the president was wrapping up a European tour that was aimed in part at cleaning up the image of a country wracked by religious violence.
Thein Sein told France 24 TV that allegations of "ethnic cleansing" in the state of Rakhine were not true and were part of a "smear campaign" by outsiders.

The unrest in Meikhtila was sparked by a quarrel at a Muslim-owned gold shop on March 20, but escalated after a group of Muslim men pulled a monk off his motorcycle and burned him to death.

Enraged, Buddhist-led mobs destroyed 12 of the city's 13 mosques and burned down hundreds of homes before marching to a prestigious Islamic school, where they killed 36 teachers and students as police and local officials looked on.
The violence, which left a total of 44 people dead, went unchecked until a state of emergency was declared March 22.

It imposed a curfew from 10pm to 4am and barred assemblies of more than five people. It also allowed local authorities to seek military assistance to help bring the situation under control.

"Lifting the emergency order is an important step, but the critical question is what is the government's plan to foster reconciliation between Buddhist and Muslim communities in these areas," said Phil Robertson, deputy director for Asia with New York-based Human Rights Watch.

He noted that 7,000 displaced people were still afraid to return to their homes to start rebuilding their lives. "Just hoping for the best is not much of a plan," he said.
Myanmar only recently emerged from a half-century of isolation and brutal military rule.
The struggle to contain tensions between the country's Muslim and Buddhist communities - more than 250 people have died in clashes in the last year - is proving another major challenge for Thein Sein's reformist administration.

Many of those targeted have been ethnic Rohingya Muslims, who have lived in Myanmar for generations but are still viewed by many Buddhists as foreign interlopers from Bangladesh.
Human Rights Watch accused the government in an April report of an "ethnic cleansing" campaign. It said officials, community leaders and Buddhist monks organized and encouraged mobs to target the minority group, sometimes with the backing of security forces.
Robertson stood by the report's findings Saturday, and disputed Thein Sein's allegations of a smear campaign against the government.

"Thein Sein's dismissals of ethnic cleansing in Rakhine state have zero credibility," he said. "Don't forget this is the man who last year tried to persuade the visiting UN High Commissioner for Refugees to take all the Rohingya out of Burma.

"Thein Sein's self-appointed investigation commission didn't even bother to address accountability for the violence in 2012, and he's continually looked the other way as his security forces have continued their abuses and covered up their atrocities against the Rohingya."

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