Arakan State: Rohingya political groups had welcomed
the European Parliament resolution (2012/2604(RSP)) of 20 April 2012
which called for changes to the 1982 law on citizenship to ensure due
recognition of the right to citizenship of the Rohingya ethnic minority
in Burma, according to press release of the Arakan Rohingya National
Organisation (ARNO).
“The resolution also called for the release of all political
prisoners without delay and conditions, and access of ICRC and
international human rights bodies to Burma’s prisons; to introduce
amendments to the 2008 constitution; to guarantee free and independent
media; to initiate legal reforms in order to ensure a truly independent
and impartial judiciary and to establish process of justice and
accountability for past human rights abuses.”
The Rohingya groups - the Arakan Rohingya National Organisation (ARNO) and the Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK (BROUK).
“The whole Rohingya people feel encouraged by this resolution,” said Nurul Islam, the President of ARNO.
“While
cautiously welcoming the recent positive changes in Burma, including
mutual rapprochement between President U Thein Sein and Daw Aung San Suu
Kyi, the resolution expresses concerns on the policies and
discrimination against Rohingya people, and issues concerning human
rights and other important matters,” the press release said.
The
Burma citizenship law of 1982 was designed by former BSPP dictator
General Ne Win to exterminate Rohingya Muslims from Arakan. It violates
several fundamental principles of customary international law standards,
has deprived the Rohingya of their Burmese citizenship rendering them
‘stateless’ in their own homeland. 1982 citizenship law effects to
Rohingya in their all activities such as restriction on movement,
marriage, and education and so on, according to BROUK press released.
The
law promotes discrimination against those who do not belong to
so-called racially pure-blooded 135 ethnic groups that the government
accepts as Burmese nationals and deliberately denies citizenship to
Rohingya who had previously been recognized as citizens and ethnic group
in Burma, according to ARNO press release.
The rejection of
Rohingya’s citizenship rights and ethnic rights by the government of
Thein Sein is the main contributing factor to the growth of the refugee
problem and the boat people crisis in the region. The Junta’s policy
towards Rohingyas has been intolerable. The extreme situation has forced
them to prefer to take perilous voyages by rickety boats across seas
and oceans rather than live in their homeland; as a result hundreds of
Rohingya boat people drowned over the years, according to Tun Khin, the
president, BROUK.
Therefore, we urge upon the international
community and governments to set the ‘issue of Rohingya citizenship’ as
one of the benchmarks for lifting sanctions on the Burmese government as
the 1982 citizenship law largely ignores state’s ‘obligation to respect
the right to nationality’ and it does not oblige the state to protect
stateless persons.
The resolution also calls on the Burmese
authorities, among other things, to completely end the decade-old
internal armed conflicts, to take more positive measures for peace
negotiations towards political and democratic reforms.
Similarly,
the Christian Solidarity Worldwide has welcomed the European Union’s
decision to suspend sanctions against Burma for a year, which called for
“substantially improved” access for humanitarian assistance, especially
for those affected by the conflict in Kachin State and along the
eastern border, as well as moves towards improving the welfare of the
predominantly Muslim Rohingya people who live in northern Arakan State
but are denied citizenship and are subjected to severe restrictions and
persecution.
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