Thursday, March 27, 2014

Burma’s Muslims are facing incredibly harsh curbs on marriage, childbirth and religion...

Last March, sectarian riots roiled Central Burma and at least 48 people, mainly Muslims, were slaughtered by machete-wielding thugs. Buddhist monks spurred on frenzied mobs in an orgy of bloodshed that will be forever indelible in the minds of the Southeast Asian nation’s Muslim minority. The violence spread to a further 11 townships.

One year on, thousands remain homeless and animosity is entrenched. “It is not stable and conditions are still very dangerous,” says Aung Thein, a 51-year-old Muslim lawyer in Meiktila, a central Burmese town of 100,000 people, where at least five mosques and more than 800 homes were razed to the ground.

Adding to this already fraught picture, new legislation threatens to isolate the Muslims further. Proposed regulations will restrict religious conversions, make it illegal for Buddhist women to marry Muslim men, place limits on the number of children Muslims can have, and outlaw polygamy, which is permitted in Islam.

More than 1.3 million signatures have reportedly been gathered in support of this plan, which is spearheaded by a group of extremist Buddhist monks and their lay supporters. The proposals were forwarded by reformist President Thein Sein to Lower House Speaker Shwe Mann late last month, and have now been submitted to relevant ministries to be drafted as bills. They have been dubbed an “intolerance package” by Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, who says they would be a “recipe for disaster for a multicultural, multi-religious country like Burma.” Full story...

Related posts:
  1. Ethnic ceansing of the Rohingya people: Genocide in Myanmar?
  2. Aung San Suu Kyi: complicity with tyranny...
  3. The Burmese govt is rounding up the Rohingyas into camps...
  4. 'Prison camps' or risking death at sea: Anti-Muslim mob violence provokes...
  5. Buddhists torch Muslim homes in Myanmar...
  6. Why Burma could become another Rwanda...
  7. U Wirathu, Burma’s 'bin Laden of Buddhism’

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