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POST TIME: 22 September, 2017 00:00 00 AM / LAST MODIFIED: 21 September, 2017 10:16:25 PM
Rakhine ‘improving’, says Myanmar at UN as Rohingyas still flee
Army chief urges ‘national races’ to return home
AFP

Rakhine ‘improving’, 
says Myanmar at UN 
as Rohingyas still flee

Myanmar insisted Wednesday to the United Nations that the crisis in violence-torn Rakhine state was easing after heavy international. criticism, reports AFP. In a sharp contrast to the claim, the United Nations says more than 420,000 Rohingya have fled for safety to Bangladesh in the face of an army campaign that includes the burning of villages and rape.

Myanmar’s second vice president Henry Van Thio addressed the annual UN General Assembly in the place of leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who a day earlier delivered a speech calling for patience.

Van Thio’s remarks are even less likely than Suu Kyi’s to mollify global concerns as he questioned the reasons for the flight of members of the Rohingya Muslim minority.

“I am happy to inform you that the situation has improved,” Van Thio said in his address, saying there have been no clashes since September 5.

“Accordingly, we are concerned by reports that the numbers of Muslims crossing into Bangladesh remain unabated. We would need to find out the reason for this exodus,” he said.

French President Emmanuel Macron earlier Wednesday described the campaign as genocide.

Van Thio did not use the term Rohingya, referring to them simply as Muslims. The Rohingya are widely reviled in the Buddhist-majority country.

Van Thio noted that the army campaign came in response to a rebel attack and said that non-Muslims have also suffered. But Myanmar’s third-in-command

thanked foreign countries for support, not referring directly to their criticism.

“Humanitarian assistance is our first priority. We are committed to ensuring that aid is received by all those in need, without discrimination,” Van Thio said.

Suu Kyi’s stance has disheartened human rights groups who had campaigned for her freedom during the Nobel Peace Prize winner’s 15 years under house arrest by a military junta.

But analysts say that Suu Kyi, while now the country’s leader, may not be able to curb the army even if she took the political risk of speaking out.

Meanwhile, Myanmar’s army chief yesterday called on the ‘national races’ people internally displaced by violence in Rakhine State to go home and rebuild communities, making no mention of 422,000 Rohingya Muslims who fled to Bangladesh to escape security force’s operations.

Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, in a speech on his plans for Rakhine on his first visit there since the latest strife erupted, said the military had handled the situation as best as it could after attacks allegedly by Rohingya insurgents on Aug. 25.  Min Aung Hlaing made no mention of the accusation of ethnic cleansing in his speech to business people, officials and some of the displaced, in Sittwe, the state capital.

 “Regarding the rehabilitation of villages of our national races, for the national races who fled their homes, first of all they must go back to their places,” he said. “National races” is a Myanmar term referring to members of officially recognized indigenous ethnic groups who make up the diverse nation. The Rohingya are not recognized as a “national race”, and are instead seen as illegal immigrants and denied citizenship.