TOKYO: Myanmar’s charismatic opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi
said on Wednesday that the estrangement of minority Muslims in her
country was “a very sad state of affairs” and the community must be made
to feel secure.
Sectarian violence in Buddhist-majority Myanmar killed 43 people last
month. Thousands, mostly Muslims, were driven from their homes and
businesses as bloodshed spread across the central region of one of
Asia’s most diverse countries.
Suu Kyi, a devout Buddhist, has been mostly reserved in her comments
on the violence and the failure of the Nobel Peace Prize-winner to
defuse the tension appears to have undermined her image as a unifying
moral force.
But in a news conference on a visit to Japan, she said: “I’ve met
some Muslim leaders very recently. It is very sad, because none of them
has been to any other country apart from Burma (Myanmar). They did not
feel that they belonged anywhere and it was sad for them that they were
made to feel that they didn’t belong in our country either.
“This is a very sad state of affairs. We must learn to accommodate those with different views from ours.”
She also said the government should review Myanmar’s citizenship
laws, although she again failed to directly answer a question on whether
she considered the Rohingyas to be citizens.
Around 800,000 Muslim Rohingyas live in Rakhine State in the west but
are effectively stateless, denied citizenship both by Myanmar and
neighbouring Bangladesh. Many Burmese consider them to be illegal
immigrants.
At least 110 people were killed and 120,000 left homeless, mostly Rohingyas, by sectarian violence in Rakhine State in 2012.
“Every country has the responsibility to consider the possibility
that the (citizenship) laws are not in keeping with international
standards. And this is what the Burmese government should have the
courage to do. To face the issue of citizenship fairly,” Suu Kyi told
reporters.
Earlier, addressing students at Tokyo University, Suu Kyi said she
was “not a magician” and will not be able to solve long-running ethnic
disputes.
“I’ve said that the most important thing is to establish the rule of law…(it) is not just about the judiciary, it’s about the administration, it’s about the government, it’s about our police force, it’s about the training that we give to security forces,” said Suu Kyi.
“I’ve said that the most important thing is to establish the rule of law…(it) is not just about the judiciary, it’s about the administration, it’s about the government, it’s about our police force, it’s about the training that we give to security forces,” said Suu Kyi.
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