In Birma
Burma
the Buddhist spiritual leader has declared the muslim minority of the country, the Rohingya people, who have lived there for centuries, as 'illegal immigrants', who must be locked away in camps awaiting deportation, and claims violence against them is justified.
Some have lived for centuries, some have lived there since the British Empire, some are from Bangladesh. Who is or is not an illegal immigrant is unclear, as they are all categorically being denied citizenship.
Indonesia has also claimed that the majority of boat refugees are actually Bangladeshi labourers. Pastebin if you can't get paste paywall.A sizable number of mujahideen were present and concentrated in the province of Arakan, Burma. There were many Muslim Rebels in Rakhine State of Burma in 1946—a year after achieving Independence. Mir Kashem was the leader of the group known as "Mujahids", a group that consisted primarily of immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh. This particular movement was crushed by the Burmese Army in 1950s. Mir Kashem himself was assassinated in Cox's Bazar. This movement under Kashem collapsed after his death and his followers surrendered. When asked about their race, they called themselves as "Rohingyas". They were much more active before the 1962 coup d'etat by General Ne Win. Ne Win carried out some military operations targeting them over a period of two decades. The prominent one was "Operation King Dragon" which took place in 1978; as a result, many Muslims in the region fled to neighboring Bangladesh as refugees. Nevertheless, the Burmese mujahideen remained active within the remote areas of Arakan. Their associations with Bangladeshi mujahideen were significant but they have extended their networks to the international level and countries such as Pakistan, Malaysia, et al., during the recent years. They collect donations, and receive religious military training outside of Burma.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mujahideen#Burma
They've even declared their own little Islamic Republic in Burma, which I'm sure is just a swell place. Also looking up ethnic conflicts in Burma and civil war, not only does fighting with Islamists, Rohingya and the Burmese continue, but
there's even conflict with their chinese minorities that has affected hundreds of thousands.
He says "muslims, with their polygamy, breed so fast that if we do not get rid of them we will get a new IS in Birma."
Ha, he's decades late, Burma's already got Al Qaeda. Hell, does anyone remember when I was posting twitter feeds from ISIS supporters (where there was a shit ton of ISIS cakes, that was hilarious) and I got really confused when there was that one guy waving the ISIS flag in the ruins of some great southeast asian city? I thought he must've been an Indonesian on holiday in Cambodia or something, but you never bloody know these days who's just baking jihad cakes or who's out for skulls.
The past few weeks mass graves have been discovered in the jungle near the border with Thailand, with hundreds of dead Rohingya, including many woman and children.
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Mass graves caused by human traffickers.Footage has come to the Human Rights Watch, showing Rohingiya people being beaten to death by a mob with bamboo sticks, while the police stand beside it watching, doing nothing.
So much for Buddhism being peaceful, but we kinda knew that already.
Meanwhile across the border in Bangladesh critics of islam are hacked to death with machetes, apostates hacked to death with machetes (though I believe the most recent case only had a woman being slapped by an imam while she and her family were exiled - progress) and within Burma itself Buddhist women are gang raped and murdered with machetes, all by muslims. Have this gem from the guardian too regarding Bangladesh: Shah Ahmad Shafi, who heads Hefazat-e-Islam, the country's largest radical Islamic movement, at his instigation over 500,000 demonstrators clogged the streets of Dhaka on 5 May, demanding the application of 13 measures, including a ban on mixing of men and women in public places, the removal of sculptures and demands for the former wording of the constitution to be reinstated, affirming "absolute trust and faith in Almighty Allah". About 50 people were killed in clashes with police and several leaders were arrested. Since then Hefazat has avoided the media, for fear of reprisals. The government is extremely wary of a movement that has steadily gathered strength since its launch three years ago.
So much for Islam being peaceful, but we kinda knew that already.
Isn't that such a helpful statement? I can see how it really contributed much to this discussion. We're at fedora the explorer tipping point.
Even Noble Peace Prize winner and Birmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi is not willing to speak up against, or give any comment on the killings. It is presumed she dares not do so, in fear of losing votes for the next election. The Dalai Llama has called upon her, to take a stand against the violence.
Guardian on the Dalai Llama and Aung San Suu Kyi.
The Japanese were responsible for the worst atrocities of WW2 and a great number of the perpetrators were Buddhist. In Sri Lanka the Buddhist Sinhalas are currently brutally oppressing the Hindu Tamils, in the last few years using rape camps, summary executions and a variety of human rights violations to prevent any future uprisings. During the war with the LTTE they were intentionally shelling hospitals to kill as many Tamil civilians as possible. Tamil Eelam looks a lot like 1990s Bosnia now.
I've noticed that in debates about religion people tend to criticise Christianity and Islam and then end up saying something daft like "I hate all religions, they're destructive, divisive forces,Buddhism excepted". Buddhism is just like any other religion and I wish misinformed people would stop giving it a free pass, it's really lazy thinking.
In all fairness the reason why people give Buddhism a free pass is because only Jainism enshrines the principle of non-violence above all else more, with perhaps only that one people who got genocided by the Maoris being even more non-violent (as they went extinct based off of that principle). There's no Buddhist text justifying slavery or killing, and their holy figures do crazy shit like allowing themselves to be eaten by a tiger to save the tiger's life. This fable of feeding the tiger with one's own sacrifice is a brilliant contrast to what Wimala Biwuntha, used the tiger imagery for; likeing Muslims to a tiger who enters an ill-defended house to snatch away its occupants. And in other news, it's ok to crucify your enemies because of Jesus.
When the Japanese and what the Burmese are doing what they're doing right now, Buddhism becomes synonymous with being Nippon or being Burmese, and they do the equivalent of an Abrahamic follower breaking all the commandments and pissing Moses off. There's something funny about watching an interview of an ex-IRA soldier asking in what he specifically believes in in regards to Christianity, with his beliefs basically describing Protestantism down to the T; it's not about the philosophy, it's synonymous with the ethnic identity. Hell, even the Yuros are beginning to see Muslims as their own race. Look at what happens when a Rohingya converts to another religion; if it's not Buddhism, they're not Burmese. Then they're fucked because they can't even return to the Rohingya, because the convert is not muslim, no longer Rohingya and is an apostate. Again, religion synonymous with ethnicity. Or perhaps a better term would be identity. You get the idea. The fracture is exploited for the government's security. It should come as no surprise that monk Wirathu, who was once imprisoned by the junta, is now supported by members of the new government as he is removing a threat to them on their western borders.
Ultimately nothing will get done. The Burmese government doesn't even treat its own citizens any better,
allowing children to be sold for bags of rice. It's apt to bring up the Japanese, who didn't sign the Geneva Convention before WWII because it would've demanded that they treat their prisoners better than their own soldiers. With a government like that you're two steps behind helping the group of
others when you're still hurting your own. And that's even if you forget all the blood spilt built up and rebels, soldiers and terrorists running amok through the populations of Burma. The world cannot be split between innocent victims and guilty oppressors. The cynical view that everyone is guilty of something is a much more accurate world view, because everyone is guilty of something. I remember the large numbers of people both here and without who were urging military intervention in Syria, supporting the arming of rebels in Syria in order to stop their massacre by Assad's security forces... Ignoring prior learned experience in regards to arming fundamentalists or common sense in arming fighters eating people's hearts. What I'm saying is, Western media is too often focused with creating victim narratives because that's easy for western minds to comprehend. Armenian genocide, Holocaust, Holodomor, everything's easy when it's black and white.
It is not. It never is. Everyone is wrong and the whole world has plucked an eye for an eye to blindness.