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    Sunday, 3 September 2017

    Who are the Rohingya Muslims?

    Why are the more than one million Rohingya in Myanmar considered the 'world's most persecuted minority'?


    The Rohingya are regularly portrayed as "the world's most abused minority". 

    They are an ethnic Muslim gathering who have lived for quite a long time in the greater part Buddhist Myanmar. Presently, there are around 1.1 million Rohingya Muslims who live in the Southeast Asian nation. 

    The Rohingya speak Rohingya or Ruaingga, a tongue that is unmistakable to others talked in Rakhine State and all through Myanmar. They are not viewed as one of the nation's 135 authority ethnic gatherings and have been denied citizenship in Myanmar since 1982, which has adequately rendered them stateless. 


    About the greater part of the Rohingya in Myanmar live in the western waterfront territory of Rakhine and are not permitted to leave without government consent. It is one the poorest states in the nation with ghetto-like camps and an absence of fundamental administrations and openings. 

    Because of continuous brutality and abuse, a huge number of Rohingya have fled to neighboring nations either via land or pontoon throughout numerous decades. 

    Where are the Rohingya from? 


    Muslims have lived in the zone now referred to as Myanmar since as right on time as the twelfth century, as per numerous students of history and Rohingya gatherings. 

    The Arakan Rohingya National Organization has stated, "Rohingyas have been living in Arakan from time immemorial," alluding to the zone now known as Rakhine. 

    Amid the over 100 years of British run (1824-1948), there was a lot of relocation of workers to what is currently known as Myanmar from the present India and Bangladesh. Since the British controlled Myanmar as an area of India, such movement was viewed as inside, as per Human Rights Watch (HRW). 
    Rohingya Muslims
    A new Rohingya refugee walks with her belongings towards the makeshift Kutupalang refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh [Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]

    The relocation of workers was seen adversely by most of the local populace. 

    After freedom, the administration saw the relocation that occurred amid British control as "unlawful, and it is on this premise they deny citizenship to the greater part of Rohingya," HRW said in a 2000 report. 
    Rohingya Muslims
    Members of Bangladesh's border guards gesture towards Rohingya stranded in the no man's land between the Myanmar and Bangladesh borders [Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]

    This has driven numerous Buddhists to consider the Rohingya as Bengali, dismissing the term Rohingya as a current development, made for political reasons.Read More

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