31 January 2013
Source PressTV
January 31, 2013
A political analyst tells Press TV that the issue about the Rohingyas is one of the most gravest problems that we see in the world today and these people are in need of protection and help.
Press TV has conducted an interview with James Jennings, president of Conscience International, to further discuss the issue. What follows is an approximate transcription of the interview.
January 31, 2013
A political analyst tells Press TV that the issue about the Rohingyas is one of the most gravest problems that we see in the world today and these people are in need of protection and help.
This is while Thailand says it has intercepted a boat carrying 200
Myanmarese Rohingyas near the southwestern island of Phuket and has
detained the refugees.
Press TV has conducted an interview with James Jennings, president of Conscience International, to further discuss the issue. What follows is an approximate transcription of the interview.
Press TV: Why is it that the international community is not doing
literally anything to stop the violence going on in Myanmar for over a
year now?
Jennings: The fact is that the Rohingyas are among the most
persecuted group of people in the world and also they are largely a
stateless group because of the status of citizenship that not been
awarded by Myanmar.
You must understand that there are several wars going on within
Myanmar now including the Kachins in the north and the Karens in the
south and of course the Rohingyas in the west.
I was in Myanmar in October and traveled the length of that
country. The issue about the Rohingyas should be among the first issues
in the world attention right now.
However it is certainly not the only place where there are people
who are excluded from citizenship or statehood and of course the
Palestinians would be among the most prominent of those groups and
certainly among the most long-lasting issues.
But in Central Africa there are population groups that are excluded
from one state or another. In Myanmar we have a particular problem that
needs to be addressed as a problem for the citizenship of the Rohingyas
who have been there for a very long time and the central government in
Rangoon certainly should deal with that issue.
Press TV: What role can Myanmar’s neighbors play in relieving the
pain of these refugees because literally we see some of the neighbors
such as Thailand literally rejecting those people fleeing the violence?
Jennings: It is true that in Bangladesh and also in Thailand and
other places there have been rejections of the people and many of them
have become “boat people” as we saw during the Vietnam War some thirty
five, forty years ago and this is really an intolerable situation for
the world community and the world conscious and the United Nations has
weighed in on the issue but needs to do more.
It is one of the most gravest problems that we see in the world
today and throughout Southeast Asia that has known many of these
problems. These people are in need of protection and help, it does not
look like that Rangoon is very interested although I did interview
members of the commission who were studying that from Rangoon but the
action has not been commensurate with the obvious concern that they have
as well.
Posted by Mohammed Rafique
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