On Monday, Burmese President Thein Sein is due to visit the White
House. The visit represents another milestone in recently burgeoning
U.S.-Burma relations, and an opportunity to engage Thein Sein on the
significance of respecting international human rights norms -- such as
protecting its minority Muslim population's religious freedoms -- to
continued Burmese democratic reform. The country's otherwise tainted
record on religious freedom, including escalating communal violence,
threatens to undermine its transition from one-party, autocratic
military rule to more representative governance.
It adversely impacts our global security as well.
By way of background, more than 75 percent of the world's population
resides in countries where official restrictions on religious freedom
prevail. Despite laudable strides toward democratic reform, Myanmar
(also referred to as Burma) is among those nations. In fact, it stands
out as among the world's 25 most populous nations with the most
government restrictions on, and social hostilities due to, religion.
Notably, Burmese religious hatred, bias and violence are frequently
directed toward its Rohingya Muslim population.
Who are the Rohingya Muslims?
The U.N. has long characterized the Rohingya Muslims, a religious and
ethnic minority community numbering approximately 1 million in Myanmar,
as one of the world's most persecuted minorities. Anti-Rohingya and
anti-Muslim sentiment has long tainted the nation's political and social
spheres.
During the country's more than 60-year military rule since 1962, the
Burmese army committed numerous human rights violations, for instance,
including killing, raping and torturing its Rohingya Muslim population
culminating at times in mass expulsions (and a chronic refugee crises in
neighboring Bangladesh).
Such deplorable human rights and humanitarian conditions is further
exasperated by the Rohingya and other Muslims' official "statelessness."
Despite the fact that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
guarantees the right to a nationality, prohibiting its arbitrary
deprivation, the Burmese Citizenship Act, enacted back in 1982, codified
the legal exclusion of the Rohingya denying them equal citizenship
rights.
To be sure, this denial of Burmese citizenship has resulted in
additional injustices and inequalities, including the group's lack of
access to identity documents, education and employment. It has also
rendered group members vulnerable to arbitrary detention, forced labor
and discriminatory taxation. The Burmese government has further
restricted their rights to marry, own property and move freely -- rights
guaranteed to non-citizens as well as citizens under international law.
Unfortunately, Burmese President Thein Sein remains steadfastly
opposed to repealing or amending the 1982 Citizenship Act. And the
plight of the Rohingya Muslims will not improve until the law is
stripped of its discriminatory provisions.
Contemporary Developments
Both government officials and fellow civilians continue to persecute
the Rohingya Muslims even with the country's current democratic
transition since a nominally civilian government was ushered in by
popular elections in March 2011.
Human rights violations not only include the denial of citizenship
rights mentioned above, but also restrictions on religious freedom such
as mosque constructions as well as religiously motivated violence.
Indeed, sectarian violence often perpetrated by members of the
majority Buddhist population has most recently erupted in June 2012,
October 2012, March 2013, April 2013; it persists and is spreading to
previously unaffected areas of the country.
The violence has reaped devastating effects.
The communal violence has left approximately 13,000 people homeless.
More than 120,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) are living in
temporary shelters with limited access to food, medical care, sanitation
facilities and other types of humanitarian necessities.
Responsible Burmese officials and security forces -- who have refused
to protect the Rohingya Muslims at critical moments, participated in
the persecution and obstructed access to humanitarian aid -- have not
been subject to prosecution. Not surprisingly, a general climate of
impunity prevails as Rohingya Muslims continue to endure brutal police
repression, forced conscription to perform labor, arbitrary detention,
beatings, killings and mistreatment.
Why Should We Care?
Last year, we re-designated Myanmar as a Country of Particular
Concern (CPC) under the International Religious Freedom Act because of
related pervasive violations. During President Thein Sein's visit on
Monday, he must understand that the status quo arguably threatens our
global security.
Recent evidence from Georgetown University
suggests that state restrictions on religious freedom may contribute to
violent extremism. Such repression, as described above, may radicalize
targeted religious communities and/or enhance the violent message of
militants abroad. While I am an ardent supporter of nonviolence even in
the face of legitimate political and other grievances, it is difficult
to ignore the implications here.
Burmese officials who arbitrarily arrest, detain, beat, injure and
kill Rohingya Muslims may enhance the appeal of those advocating a more
violent response to government repression -- perhaps within the country
but also well beyond. Indeed, media outlets around the world, including
segments of the Muslim and Arab world, have already begun reporting on
the plight of the Rohingya Muslims in Burma.
Conversely, Georgetown's research findings suggest that enhanced
religious freedom may help "moderate, contain, counteract, or prevent
the origin or spread" of violent religious extremism.
Through broader U.S. engagement, communication and dialogue -- such
as Monday's momentous White House meeting -- President Thein Sein must
come to understand the underlying significance of religious freedom to
enhanced global security. He must understand that continued Burmese
persecution of the minority faith community may contribute to violent
extremism by inadvertently promoting its appeal.
Further, violent extremists elsewhere will manipulate those incidents
of persecution to serve a more nefarious, violent narrative to recruit
others to their abhorrent cause. The implications are far-reaching.
What We Should Do
Notably, the U.S. has expended more than $24 million in humanitarian
aid to help address the suffering in Myanmar. But in the current
climate of fiscal austerity, such levels of financial aid, even for
humanitarian purposes, cannot be reasonably sustained.
Moreover, sanctions have proven grossly ineffective largely because
of the willingness of other countries in the region to continue trading
with Myanmar for their own economic and other strategic self-interest.
Potential solutions? What if we attempted to address the underlying causes of the communal strife and violence.
As an initial, necessary measure the Burmese should eliminate the
discriminatory provisions of the 1982 Citizenship Act rendering the
Rohingya Muslims "stateless." Statelessness deprives the Rohingya of
equal protection under the law and facilitates additional injustices,
thus contributing to increased likelihood of sectarian and other
destabilizing conflict.
Burmese officials should adopt pluralism as an ideal model allowing
for greater inclusivity of all of its religious and ethnic minorities.
Formal inclusion of the Rohingya and other Muslims into the public and
political spheres provides a nonviolent means to making a meaningful
contribution to society thereby contributing to our global security.
Moreover, the sociological consequence of religious pluralism is a
general recognition and acceptance of all faiths practiced by diverse
groups. Arguably, this represents an ideal model for a diverse country
like Myanmar.
It is significant to note that while there does not appear to be any
current evidence of violent radicalization among the Rohingya or other
Muslims in Myanmar, guarding against the phenomenon (there and abroad)
is a critical consideration in light of the continuing Global War on
Terror (GWOT).
By protecting religious freedom and conferring citizenship rights
upon the Rohingya, the Burmese will continue its effective transition
toward democracy. Unfortunately, the persistent waves of violence
otherwise threaten to undermine its progress as well as global security.
President Thein Sein should walk away from Monday's meeting at the
White House with that realization.
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