Home
/
Isiam
/
Muslim Minorities
/
Rohingya: Stateless and 'Friendless' in Myanmar
Rohingya: Stateless and 'Friendless' in Myanmar
Jun 16, 2025 6:34 PM

  Decades of discrimination have left the Muslim Rohingya stateless, scattered around the globe and viewed by the United Nations as among the most persecuted minorities on the planet.

  About 800,000 Rohingya live in Myanmar, according to the UN, mostly in western Rakhine state, which has been swept by fierce sectarian violence in recent days.

  Speaking a Bengali dialect similar to one in southeast Bangladesh, the Sunni Muslim Rohingya have long been treated as "foreign" by the government and many Burmese, a situation activists say has fostered rifts with Rakhine's Buddhists.

  Unwanted both by Myanmar and neighboring Bangladesh - where there are an estimated 300,000 Rohingya - many live in abject poverty with few if any rights or means to support themselves.

  Images of squalid camps and reports of perilous attempts to flee to other countries in rickety boats have drawn international attention to their plight in recent years, but their living conditions have scarcely improved.

  Myanmar has a multitude of ethnic groups, many of whom have conducted sporadic armed rebellions since independence from Britain in 1948.

  But the Rohingya are not officially recognized, partly because of a 1982 law stipulating that minorities must prove they lived in Myanmar prior to 1823 - before the first Anglo-Burmese war - to obtain nationality.

  Representatives of the Rohingya say their people were in Myanmar long before then.

  "As well as being stateless, Myanmar's Rohingyas are confronted with other forms of persecution, discrimination and exploitation," the United Nation's refugee agency (UNHCR) said in a report published in December.

  Such measures included forced labor, restrictions on freedom of movement, lack of land rights, education and public services, it said.

  "The Rohingya are virtually friendless amongst Myanmar's other ethnic, linguistic and religious communities," the UNHCR report said.

  They are also subject to a rule, embedded in marriage licenses, that they are only permitted to have two children, according to rights groups.

  Two huge waves of refugees, of approximately 250,000 people each, flooded across the border into Bangladesh in 1978 and 1991-92. Large scale repatriations ensued, with the UN questioning the "voluntary" nature of the moves.

  Bangladesh sees the Rohingya people as a major burden on its strained finances and the refugees are blamed for all sorts of crimes in the southeast of the country, ranging from petty theft to drug trafficking.

  In recent years, Rohingya migrants have undertaken dangerous voyages by boat towards Malaysia or Thailand, whose navy has in the past been accused of towing them back out to sea.

  Around one million Rohingya are now thought to live outside Myanmar, including communities in Pakistan and around 400,000 in Gulf states, according to the UNHCR.

  In Rakhine state, they are concentrated mainly in three districts - Maungdaw, Buthidaung and Rathedaung - and many view them with hostility as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, referring to them as "Bengali".

  That animosity extends outside the state and even includes key figures in Myanmar's democratic movement, long supported by the West.

  "We want to say clearly that Rohingya are not one of the Myanmar ethnic nationalities," Ko Ko Gyi, a prominent former political prisoner and student activist, told AFP on Saturday.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Bangladeshi border guards keep watch at a wharf in Taknaf on June 12. Bangladesh has refused 14 boats carrying 550 Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence in Myanmar in the last two days.

  Source: Agencies

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Muslim Minorities
Rohingya victims try to recover at Bangladesh hospitals
  Rohingya refugees who were shot, beaten, stabbed, burned or raped by the Myanmar military are struggling to heal in hospitals in neighboring Bangladesh, exorcising their trauma while their bodies try to recover.   Many of them lie on thin, dirty mattresses on the floor at overflowing hospitals, and their treatment is...
MSF: More than 6,700 Rohingya killed in Myanmar
  At least 6,700 Rohingya were killed by Myanmar security forces in one month following a government-led crackdown in the country's Rakhine state in late August, according to Doctors Without Borders (MSF).   The figure, published on Thursday in an MSF report, is significantly higher than the numbers reported by Myanmar military...
Rohingya activists demand a halt to 'ongoing genocide'
  Activists have called for stronger action to stop the "ongoing genocide" against the majority-Muslim Rohingya ethnic group after US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said he was against "broad-based economic sanctions" against Myanmar.   At a joint press conference with Myanmar's de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi in the capital...
UN concerned French terror law could affect Muslims
  UN experts on Wednesday warned France to comply with international human rights obligations while debating a new anti-terror law.   France's draft law "may perpetuate the emergency measures introduced in 2015, and establish a permanent state of emergency," analysts from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)...
Spain sees over 500 Islamophobic incidents last year
  More than 500 Islamophobic incidents were recorded in Spain last year, including against women and children and several mosques, according to a civil society group.   Details of the incidents were documented in the report "Islamophobia in Spain 2017” released Friday by the Citizens’ Platform Against Islamophobia (PCI).   According to the...
Rohingya return to Myanmar 'puts them in tiger's grasp'
  An agreement signed between Bangladesh and Myanmar concerning the voluntary repatriation of more than 600,000 Rohingya, exonerates Myanmar's security forces of any responsibility for their displacement, and places the persecuted minority in harm's way, according to a Bangladeshi opposition politician.   Bangladesh's main opposition party criticized the government for "selling itself"...
Army's rape of Rohingya women sweeping, methodical: AP
  The rape of Rohingya women by Myanmar's security forces has been sweeping and methodical, the Associated Press news agency found in interviews with 29 women and girls who fled to neighboring Bangladesh.   The sexual assault survivors from several refugee camps were interviewed separately and extensively.   The women gave AP their...
Healing trauma: The long road ahead for Rohingya
  Inside a colorful bamboo structure in Balukhali camp, groups of children sit on the floor, engrossed in board games, plastic animals and other activities. Two scamper about in costumes - one dressed as Nemo, the other as a lion. Tacked on the walls are vivid crayon drawings - the only...
Army offensive aimed at 'preventing' Rohingya return
  Myanmar security forces have carried out "well-organised, coordinated and systematic" attacks aimed at preventing Rohingya ethnic group from returning, the UN Human Rights office said in a report on Wednesday.   The report based on interviews with Rohingya who arrived in Bangladesh in the past month, said that "clearance operations" had...
Muslims in Europe well-integrated, new study claims
  Muslims in Europe are well-integrated into mainstream society but are not fully accepted by all, according to a new study released by the Bertelsmann Foundation in Germany.   The Religion Monitor 2017 surveyed education, working life and interreligious contacts of Muslims in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, France and the U.K., which are...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved