Scottish Daily Mail

The ‘saintly’ leader who’s turning a blind eye to genocide and mass rape

Lionised by the Left, she’s the Nobel Peace winner who promised her people freedom. So why is she allowing thousands to be ethnically cleansed?

- Additional reporting: EMANUEL STOAKES.

local Rohingya Muslim ethnic group. Today, there are fewer than 3,000 left. And they are not free to walk the streets. They are crammed into a tiny ghetto surrounded by barbed wire. Armed guards prevent visitors from entering — and will not allow the Rohingya Muslims to leave.

The Informatio­n Ministry denied me permission to enter, so I spoke by phone to ghetto inmates. They live in fear and terror and only talked on condition of anonymity.

One man told me: ‘Life used to be good to us. We had freedom of movement, we could go to school, our children had the chance to go to university. We could do business at downtown big market. No difficulti­es.’

It is totally different today. ‘It is like being a prisoner. There is no free movement. Not enough education, no proper healthcare. All these things are making life hopeless.’

But at least the ‘prisoners’ in the Sittwe ghetto live in their homes. The vast majority of fellow Muslims have been driven from their homes by armed mobs and now live in improvised camps.

The situation of these Rohingya is shocking. Before the 2015 elections, they were stripped of the right to vote, while punitive new laws even target their right to have children.

Most sinister is the Population Control Healthcare Bill, approved by the country’s parliament two years ago. This legislates that women in some parts of Burma must wait three years before having another child. There’s little doubt this cruel law is aimed at stalling population growth among Rohingyas.

Many Buddhists say the Rohingya have no right to live in the country because they are actually Bengali migrants who entered during British rule, meaning their real home should be Bangladesh.

However, this is disputed by scholars, who say they lived here before the British arrived. The Rohingya do look different and have a different language, customs and, of course, religion to the rest of the country. This makes them easier to pick on at a time of acute social and economic tension.

Measures such as the Population Control Healthcare Bill have led some observers to talk of genocide.

Two years ago, a Yale University report found evidence ‘that genocidal acts have been committed against Rohingya’.

Most analysts dismiss such talk. But there’s no question that the Muslims in western Myanmar live in conditions that recall the very worst of South African apartheid.

It cannot be stated too strongly that Aung San Suu Kyi has held power in Myanmar for barely a year and cannot be blamed for the desperate plight already facing the Rohingya before she came to power.

Trouble dates back to 2012 when — after a Muslim was blamed for the rape of a Buddhist woman — armed mobs surged through Sittwe and nearby villages, driving the Rohingya from their homes, killing hundreds and forcing survivors to live in camps. The charge against Suu Kyi is that she has not done enough to remedy the situation. And that she then stood by when a fresh wave of violence started last October.

These assaults began after an armed gang of allegedly Rohingya insurgents attacked guards along the Myanmar border with Bangladesh, killing nine police.

The military response was beyond all proportion, with more than 90,000 Muslims driven from their homes in a murderous campaign of rape and intimidati­on.

To be fair to Suu Kyi, she has no control of the military. Furthermor­e, she faces a desperatel­y hard task bringing this deeply backward former British colony out of dictatorsh­ip and into democracy.

Myanmar is racked with problems of which the plight of the Rohingya is only one. Neverthele­ss, her denials that the army has committed abuses makes her complicit in the tragedy.

Increasing­ly, she is criticised by global figures. Pope Francis recently condemned ‘the persecutio­n of our Rohingya brothers’ and called on ‘men and women of good faith to help them and ensure their full rights’.

Her fellow Nobel Peace Prize winner, Malala Yousafzai, 20, has called on Suu Kyi to condemn the ‘tragic and shameful’ treatment of the Myanmar’s Rohingya.

Life is getting harder here for the Rohingya and I was met with constant bureaucrat­ic obstructio­n in my attempts to access the camps.

Eventually, I was able to get inside one camp. Conditions were not too bad.

The inhabitant­s had enough food to eat and their accommodat­ion — dimly lit, makeshift huts — was bearable, though leaving them dangerousl­y vulnerable to the cyclones that frequently roar in from the sea (most of the camps are on the coast). Yet it was the

hopelessne­ss that hit me hardest. There were no jobs. There were no prospects for young people, and nothing for them to do.

It dawned on me that so many of the Rohingya have, in effect, been confined to closely guarded and monitored prison camps.

All the inhabitant­s had been there since being driven from their homes five years ago. It’s possible they will be resettled somewhere else in the future, but there is no prospect they will ever return home.

One man, who used to be a fisherman, told me: ‘I am in prison.’ He described how his every move was monitored by the police.

He told me that he and his fellow Rohingya had supported Suu Kyi when she stood for election in 2015. He said: ‘We have been stripped of the vote. But if I could have voted, I would have voted for her. I prayed for the lady to win the 2015 election. She got a Nobel Peace Prize.’

Now he is heartbroke­n. ‘She is the plaything of the army government. If the army says jump, she jumps. She will not use any words against the army.’

Britain continues to support Suu Kyi, as her recent reception at Buckingham Palace shows.

What a hideous betrayal of all we profess to stand for and believe.

During World War II, British forces fought one of our most desperate battles of the conflict in Burma, against the Japanese.

Many Burmese — including Suu Kyi’s war hero father — fought us alongside the Japanese. But not the Rohingya Muslims, who, for the most part, remained loyal to Britain. In view of this, I asked if there were any survivors from that heroic episode.

I was taken by my guides along narrow walkways to a small, dark hut, where I was introduced to a 93-yearold man with a straggly, white beard. He was almost completely blind with deep cataracts.

He told me how he had been a baggage carrier for British soldiers. ‘We gave the British food. We brought them goats and chickens. I helped the British build roads and bridges.’ After the war, he said, he had made a living as a farmer — until five years ago when he was driven from his home by violent mobs. ‘I lost my crops. My buffalo. Everything.’

Tears rolling down his cheeks, he told me: ‘My life is already destroyed. But I implore you, please rescue our new generation. This government is killing our new generation.’

Several months ago, at the height of the latest violence against the Rohingya, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson visited Myanmar.

At the time, he did not say a single word of public criticism against the atrocities being carried out by the Myanmar military against the Rohingya, though he may have done so in private, and has in recent days warned that their treatment is ‘besmirchin­g’ the country’s reputation.

The Rohingya people were loyal allies of Britain in World War II. Now they face their darkest hour. Britain and other nations must do more to help one of the most forsaken peoples of the world.

 ??  ?? Under fire: Aung San Suu Kyi and, left, Rohingya Muslims flee across the border from Myanmar to Bangladesh Pictures:AP/EPA
Under fire: Aung San Suu Kyi and, left, Rohingya Muslims flee across the border from Myanmar to Bangladesh Pictures:AP/EPA

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