Friday, June 15, 2012
Safety fears restrict relief work after Myanmar riots
SITTWE, Myanmar (Reuters) - Armed troops patrolled the northwest Myanmar city of Sittwe on Friday after days of sectarian violence that has stoked nationalist fervour and displaced 30,000 people, with many feared dead.
Heavy rain kept many residents indoors in the Rakhine state capital and police and aid groups struggled to get food to thousands of ethnic Rakhine Buddhists and Muslim Rohingyas displaced by communal rioting and arson that have presented a big test to Myanmar's 15-month-old quasi-civilian government.
Myanmar Rohingya children walk though the slum near the sea in the town of Sittwe May 19, 2012. Picture taken May 19, 2012. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj |
United Nations officials told Reuters three of its staff, two from its UNHCR refugee agency and one from the World Food Programme (WFP), all Myanmar nationals, had been detained by police in the Rohingya-dominated town of Buthidaung for unknown reasons.
The WFP had provided hundreds of sacks of rice to some areas, said Aye Win, spokesman for its operations in Myanmar.
"We will try to get to other camps as soon as we can, when it is safe and secure. We are doing as much as we can. We will go in but security is paramount," he added.
More than 20 houses were burned down late on Thursday in a village near Sittwe, residents said, adding to the 2,500 torched in the past week. But there were no reports of further deaths.
The violence, which the government said had killed 29 people and displaced 30,000 as of Thursday, is a major setback for a rapidly reforming Myanmar that has seen a year of dramatic political change after 49 years of oppressive military rule.
The new government has made peace and unity among Myanmar's many ethnic groups its mantra and has struck ceasefire deals with minority Karen, Shan, Mon and Chin rebels, among others, after decades of hostilities.
FERVENT ANGER
The Muslim community's Friday prayers were cancelled in Sittwe and surrounding villages to avoid a repeat of riots that erupted in the town of Maungdaw a week ago and spread to other parts of Rakhine state.
"Officials do not want large gatherings and want to avoid more violence. They (Muslims) will be able to pray at home," Shwe Maung, a Muslim member of parliament for the ruling Union Solidarity and Development Party, told Reuters.
What triggered the rampage of rock-hurling, arson and machete attacks is unclear and the subject of heated debate, with protests taking place in other regions and Facebook pages and Internet web boards inundated with inflammatory comments.
There is entrenched, long-standing animosity in the state bordering Bangladesh between Rakhine Buddhists and stateless Muslim Rohingyas, of whom there are an estimated 800,000, most living in abject conditions.
Bangladesh, like Myanmar, does not recognise Rohingyas as citizens and the Bangladeshi authorities have turned away more than a dozen boats with Rohingyas fleeing the violence this week.
The crisis has put President Thein Sein in a tight spot. His government is under pressure from rights groups and Western countries to show compassion towards the Rohingyas but if there is any change in policy towards them, it could face the wrath of the public, many of whom regard them as illegal immigrants.
A dawn-to-dusk curfew remained in place in Sittwe and many Rohingyas had been moved out by security forces, said Hla Maung, who is in charge of a camp looking after Rakhine Buddhists, close to a near-empty Rohingya neighbourhood.
On a visit to the Philippines, Myanmar Foreign Minister Wunna Wunna Maung Lwin told Reuters everything was being done to ensure the situation remained stable.
"We have taken care of everything, we give priority to the stability of the state. Sittwe is back to normal," Wunna Maung Lwin said.
Nobel laureate and opposition parliamentarian Aung San Suu Kyi expressed concern over the violence on Thursday.
Speaking in Switzerland on the first leg of a five-country European tour, she sidestepped a question about whether she supported granting citizenship to Rohingyas and said resolving the Rakhine conflict required "delicacy and sensitivity".
Relations between the two communities have always been uneasy and tension flared last month after the gang rape and murder of a Buddhist Rakhine woman that was blamed on Muslims.
That led to the killing of 10 Muslims in reprisal on June 3, when a Buddhist mob stopped a bus they were travelling on. The passengers had no connection to the murdered woman. State media said three Muslims are on trial for the woman's death.
(Reporting by Reuters staff reporters; Additional reporting by Manny Mogato in Manila; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Alan Raybould and Jonathan Thatcher)
Related Stories:
Violence tests Myanmar's media, and its censors
Copyright © 2013 Reuters
- Haze: Unhealthy air quality in Pasir Gudang, Larkin Lama, Kota Tinggi, Kemaman
- 15-year-old arrested after ordering five air rifles with brass bullets online
- Zahid: Government to review guidelines for hiring foreign workers to curb abuse, improve work conditions
- PM to head new fiscal policy committee to reduce deficit, increase growth
- Penang freak storm: Architect: force that hit Lim’s car would crush anything
- Penang freak storm: Inquest to be held to certify death of missing hawker

- Penang freak storm: ‘I saw his spirit, he was crying’
- Penang freak storm: Search called off for sake of heritage buildings
- Penang freak storm: Family grieves as search gets called off
- Asean ministers to discuss haze problem
- Norza receives green light to contest Umno polls
- Najib gets courtesy call from Victoria Premier
- Sole survivor of fatal accident discharged from hospital
- Dr M supports call for no-contest
- Address food hygiene issue seriously, says Chua
- Securities Commission to host PRS exhibition
- Maybank, Tenaga lift KLCI out of the red
- Mudajaya scouts for regional power plants to boost recurring income
- Astro launches 11 new channels, 5 new packages
- Glove makers buck cautious market
- Fitters advances on venture into renewable energy sector
- AmResearch maintains "Buy" on Sarawak Cable Bhd
- Spain's high-speed trains and abandoned stations
- Affin Research maintains "Buy" call on DiGi, target price RM5.39
- Aeon Credit surges after strong earnings growth
- Google settlement clears way for new Class C stock
- Malaysia's KLCI open down, plantations and banks weigh
- Public Invest Research upgrades Petra Energy to Outperform
- India issues tenders for 12,000 tonnes of palmolein from Malaysia, Indonesia
- Malaysia-Market factors to watch on June 18 (Tuesday)
- Brutal golf course dooms US Open hopefuls in final round
- Queen’s title will boost Wimbledon bid, says Andy Murray
- Chong Wei misses the days top players bring out the best in him
- Results worldwide
- Malaysia target 30 golds at ASG
- World No. 1 hopes Daren and Wei Feng will step up their game
- Kisona stays focused ahead of Asian Junior Championships
- Spurs on brink of another NBA title
- Clarke: Hard for Warner to retain Test spot
- Costa retains Tour of Switzerland crown
- Justin Rose out-duels Mickelson to capture US Open title
- McIlroy loses his cool and takes it out on club
- Aussie confident his Day will come at a Major
- Mickelson suffers most agonising Open near-miss
- The long wait for 15th Major continues for world No. 1 Woods
- Penang freak storm: Architect: force that hit Lim’s car would crush anything
- Penang freak storm: ‘I saw his spirit, he was crying’
- Penang freak storm: Family grieves as search gets called off
- EPF plans ruling for new contributors
- Penang freak storm: Inquest to be held to certify death of missing hawker
- ‘Arigato’ for Japan’s decision on visas
- Penang freak storm: Search called off for sake of heritage buildings
- Meth head snatch thief in the bag
- Woman slashed by rival meat seller
- Sole survivor of fatal accident discharged from hospital
- EPF plans ruling for new contributors
- ‘Arigato’ for Japan’s decision on visas
- Penang freak storm: Architect: force that hit Lim’s car would crush anything
- Penang freak storm: ‘I saw his spirit, he was crying’
- Blue form route to AirAsia X IPO
- Hartalega to emerge as industry game-changer
- Tune Hotels aims for listing on Bursa in 2015
- Penang freak storm: Family grieves as search gets called off
- Zahid: Government to review guidelines for hiring foreign workers to curb abuse, improve work conditions
- Plans for coastal highway from Kota Baru to Pengerang

