IRANIAN LAWMAKERS TO VISIT MYANMAR IN DAYS

       Tehran, 22 Safar 1434/4 January 2013 (MINA/FNA) – An Iranian parliamentary delegation will travel to Myanmar on January 9 to study the situation of the oppressed Muslim minority in the country, an MP informed on Thursday.

 

      An Iranian parliamentary delegation will soon visit Myanmar to examine the latest situation of the ethnic Rohingya Muslims and find out ways to help the minority in the Southeast Asian country.

 

      The representatives of Iran’s Foreign Ministry, Imam Khomeini’s Relief Committee and the Iranian Red Crescent Society will accompany the lawmakers in their two-day visit, which is scheduled to start on January 9, Vice-Chairman of the Iranian parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Mansour Haqiqatpour said.

 

      He added that Iran has recently dispatched the first consignment of humanitarian relief aid to Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, and noted that the second batch of aid would be sent to the country within the next days.

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      On Friday, a senior Iranian legislator expressed serious concern over Buddhists’ attacks against Rohingya Muslims, and called on the UN to adopt practical measures to end violence and violation of human rights against Myanmarese Muslims.

 

      Mehrdad Bao’uj Lahouti dismissed non-binding resolutions approved by the UN as ineffective in resolving the problems of Rohingyas, and said that the UN must deal with human rights violations across the globe without double-standard behaviors.

      More than 22,000 people from mainly Muslim communities have been forced to flee their homes in Western Myanmar after a fresh wave of violence and arson that left dozens dead, the UN said in a report on October 29.

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     The whole neighborhoods were razed in Buddhists’ attack on Muslims in Rakhine state a week earlier. Some 75,000 people are already crammed into overcrowded camps following clashes in June.

     The United Nations chief in Yangon, Ashok Nigam, said government estimates provided in late October said that 22,587 people had been displaced and 4,665 houses set ablaze in the latest bloodshed.

 

     “These are people whose houses have been burnt, they are still in the same locality,” he said, indicating that thousands more who had fled in boats towards the state capital Sittwe may not be included in that estimate.

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     “It is mainly the Muslims who have been displaced,” he said, adding that 21,700 of those made homeless were Muslims.

 

     The latest attack against Muslims has killed more than 80 people, according to a government official, bringing the total death toll since June to above 170.

Human Rights Watch earlier this month released satellite images showing “extensive destruction of homes and other property in a predominantly Rohingya Muslim area” of Kyaukpyu.

     Myanmar’s 800,000 Rohingyas are seen as illegal immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh by the government and many Burmese – who call them “Bengalis”.

The United Nations considers Rohingyas as one of the most persecuted minorities on the planet.(T/R-007/R-006).

 

Mi’raj News Agency (MINA)

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