Bangladesh, Myanmar: Rising Violence Between Buddhists And Muslims

October 30, 2012


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Neighboring Asian states of Bangladesh and Myanmar (Burma) are, independently, trying to calm fears of further intercommunal violence between Buddhists and Muslims after serious incidents in recent months.

At least 19 Buddhist temples were razed to the ground in Bangladesh at the end of September, with at least 120 Buddhist homes and some businesses also attacked by Muslim mobs. The violence broke out in the town of Ramu town, Cox’s Bazaar, near Bangladesh’s border with Myanmar, and spread to five towns and several dozen villages.

Bangladesh

Bangladesh

Hundreds of Buddhist artifacts were looted from the temples, some of them a thousand years old.

In the state of Rakhine, Myanmar, nearly 3,000 houses, as well as 14 religious buildings and eight rice mills were destroyed in rioting across nine townships between October 21 and 27. At least 88 people were killed, and 129 hospitalized. Police also fired on Buddhist demonstrators – killing one man and injuring another – who had gathered in Kyauknimaw, Ramree Island, Rakhine, to demand extra security and the removal of Muslims from Buddhist-majority areas. One demonstrator told The Irrawaddy that it was “no longer possible [for Buddhists and Muslims] to stay together in the same community.”

Tensions between devotees of the two faiths have been simmering, and periodically boiling over into acts of violence and rioting since June, when an Arkanese Buddhist woman was raped by two minority Muslim Rohingya men in Myanmar. They were later tried and convicted. However, Buddhist vigilantes had already taken to the streets, and, in one incident, attacked a bus and killed nine Rohingya who were suspected of the crime, but who had no connection to it. These events sparked a wave of unrest that saw tens of thousands of Rohingya fleeing Myanmar, mostly to seek refuge in Bangladesh.

Renewed violence over the past week is believed to have displaced another 32,000. Most are Rohingya, although several thousand Arkanese Buddhists are also reportedly seeking refuge in monasteries and homes of relatives.

Nevertheless, this latest explosion of violence should be seen in the wider context of growing religious radicalism and its role in politics in Asia. Islamist extremists targeted Bangladesh’s Hindu minority in 2012: Hindu temples were reportedly attacked in Nandirhat and Hathazari by the extremist Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing Chhatra Shibir in February. One was attacked in Dinajpur in August, and four temples at Parshuram in Feni, Bangladesh, were reportedly vandalized and robbed in April.

A photograph of a burning Koran was the alleged reason for the violence against Buddhists in late September. However, the government has suggested that the attacks may have been politically motivated, and aimed at forcing the state to accept more Rohingya refugees, to disrupt the ongoing war crimes trials, and to create instability ahead of elections. A number of high-profile Islamists connected to the Jamaat-e-Islami party have recently been tried for serious crimes, including organizing the rape of Hindu women during the 1971 War of Liberation when then East Pakistan split from West Pakistan to establish itself as the state of Bangladesh. Those indicted include Jamaat-e-Islami “guru” Ghulam Azam and party leader Delwar Hossain Sayedee.

In the wake of the attack on September attacks, Chakma tribal representatives (in the Chittagong Hill Tracts region) sent a memorandum to Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, urging the government to ensure the safety of Hindus and Buddhists in the country. For its part, the government seems keen to reassure non-Muslim minorities. It has promised that the demolished Buddhist temples will be rebuilt, using army engineers, at an estimated cost of 120 million Taka (approximately $1.5 million US). And as many as three hundred suspects in the attack have also been arrested.

Nevertheless, the continuing tension, and the displacement of large numbers of people, poses a serious challenge to stability and democracy in Bangladesh and Myanmar, with Buddhist as well as Muslim communities in the region liable to further radicalization if a resolution is not found soon.

One Response to Bangladesh, Myanmar: Rising Violence Between Buddhists And Muslims

  1. happygolfer Reply

    October 31, 2012 at 11:49 am

    Thank you Angel Millar for your integrity in reporting.

    Were it not for your integrity, the rest of the shrill news make it look like totally irrationale Rhakine Buddhist have been on a totally unprovoked, totally irrational blood lust against a Muslim minority trying to killing them off.

    If anyone look beyond their myopic, ADHD inflicted attention span, Bengali Muslims who have had a raving pogrom against the Hindus on the west, and the Buddhist on the east.

    And I, for the life of me, cannot understand why the Muslims on in the Western side of Pakistan, finally give up on the Bengali East Pakistanis and finally ended up splitting Pakistan into two.

    Take all things and history in context, the situation is not really understandable.

    IN these days of easy genetic mapping, it will be easy to do genetic mapping on Rohingyas, and will find them genetically Bangalis…. and all of us also know that these so called Rohingas don’t really want to be in Myanmar. If they shout loud enough the ultimate hope and wish is to be relocated to US, Europe, etc., etc…..

    Now I would like to hear if anyone is losing sleep on the Buddhist and Hindu living in fear inside Bangladesh???

    Please don’t stop your humane instinct in Myanmar. look inside Bangladesh as well please…

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