The Los Angeles Times
Published: Tuesday, Aug. 13 2013 12:00 a.m. MDT
Updated: 11 hours ago
An
internally displaced Rohingya woman stands outside her tent at a camp
for displaced Rohingya in Sittwe, northwestern Rakhine State, Myanmar,
ahead of the arrival of Cyclone Mahasen, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. A
massive evacuation to clear low-lying camps ahead of the cyclone has run
into a potentially deadly snag as members of the displaced Rohingya
minority living there have refused to leave because they don't trust
Myanmar authorities.
Gemunu Amarasinghe, Associated Press Enlarge photo»Summary
The
relationship between the White House and the government of Myanmar has
been steadily improving. President Obama went there in November;
President Thein Sein came here in May. Last year, the administration
eased the prohibition on Americans doing business in Myanmar, and this
week, it repealed most of the remaining sanctions on trade (although it
will continue to ban the import of rubies and jadeite).
The following editorial appeared recently in the Los Angeles Times:
The
relationship between the White House and the government of Myanmar has
been steadily improving. President Obama went there in November;
President Thein Sein came here in May. Last year, the administration
eased the prohibition on Americans doing business in Myanmar, and this
week, it repealed most of the remaining sanctions on trade (although it
will continue to ban the import of rubies and jadeite).
These
are Myanmar's well-deserved rewards for embarking on a program of
liberalization and democracy — moving away from absolute military rule,
holding credible elections and freeing many political prisoners. Aung
San Suu Kyi, the democracy activist who spent 15 years under house
arrest, has been in parliament for more than a
year.
And
yet for the 1 million Rohingya Muslims in the country, life is only
getting worse. The Rohingya are an ethnic minority considered to be
intruders by the government of Myanmar and by much of the country's
majority Buddhist population. Thousands have been displaced from their
homes in the western state of Rakhine by mob violence and are now
relegated to camps for displaced persons. The United Nations has
declared the Rohingya among the most persecuted groups in the world.
Last
November, Sein said he would allow the U.N. High Commissioner for Human
Rights to set up an office in the country, in part to monitor the
plight of the Rohingya. But human rights advocates say the government
has dragged its feet and the office has not yet been established,
although a U.N independent investigator, or special rapporteur,
has been allowed to make several trips through Myanmar recently.
It's
appropriate for the U.S. to recognize and reward the advances that
Myanmar has made. But it should not turn a blind eye to the country's
continuing problems, including religious and ethnic tension. It should
exercise what clout it has to help the U.N. set up the human rights
office, and should push strenuously for authorities to dismantle
repressive policies against the Rohingya, such as limiting families to
two children.
The
U.S. role is especially important because there are still so few
powerful voices of protest within the country. Suu Kyi has spoken only
tepidly against the repressive policies toward the Rohingya — and many
in her country didn't like that she weighed in at all. A troubling
anti-Muslim nationalism is spreading in Myanmar, and
it will take pressure from the U.S. along with other countries and the
U.N. to dispel it.
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