Suu Kyi Calls for Removal of “Roots of Hatred'
SEPT 18, 2012— Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi called Tuesday for the removal
of the "roots of hatred" that have fueled the conflict between ethnic Rakhines
and Muslim Rohingyas in western Burma, saying the issue has to be resolved through respect
for human rights and rule of law, and negotiations.
"Basically, whenever there is hate, there is fear. So, hate and fear are very closely
related. You have to remove the roots of hatred—that is to say you have to address these
issues that make people insecure and that make people threatened," she told RFA's
Burmese service in an interview.
"Whenever people talk about conflict resolution, whatever kind of advice they give,
there is one that is unavoidable—you have to talk to one another, you have to negotiate,
you have to sort out your problems through speech rather than violence," she said.
Aung San Suu Kyi has been criticized by rights groups for not speaking out more forcefully
on the Rohingya issue following bloody violence between the Rohingya and Rakhine
communities in Rakhine state in June, which killed 80 people and left tens of thousands
displaced.
The clashes had sparked international allegations that human rights violations were being
committed against the Rohingya, who the United Nations says are the world's most
oppressed group. The Burmese authorities do not regard them as an ethnic group even
though they have lived for generations in the country.
Last week, exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama told students in India that he
had written to Aung San Suu Kyi about the Rohingya issue but did not receive a response.
"We wrote a letter to Suu Kyi regarding the violence but we got no reply. My
representative in [New] Delhi even met the Burmese Ambassador here but it has been four
weeks and we have not heard from them. There is no channel for us to approach," the
Dalai Lama said, according to the Press Trust of India.
Silence
In an indirect reference to her relative silence on the Rohingya issue, Aung San Suu Kyi
said earlier that many did not realize that her National League for Democracy (NLD), the
main opposition party in parliament, was not in the government.
She said that the NLD is not in a "position to decide what we do and how we operate
because we are not a government."
"This needs to be understood by those who wish the NLD to do more."
Aung San Suu Kyi, who arrived on Monday for a nearly three-week U.S. visit, also explained
that her NLD gave top priority to human rights and the rule of the law in any resolution
of the conflict, noting that such differences were a universal problem and not confined to
Burma only.
"I have always said—this is the policy of my party—that human rights and rule of law
are necessary in order to bring down tensions in such a situation."
"But in the long run, you have to build up harmony between the communities through
understanding, through exchange."
She also stressed that human rights should be applied to "everybody and equally"
to all groups.
"To ignore either human rights or rule of law or to insist on human rights and
pretend rule of law is another matter will not work. These two have to go together."
Aung San Suu Kyi also said that her NLD party wants to help the government to end the
crisis in Rakhine state.
"We [the NLD] do not want to make political capital out of the situation in Rakhine
state. We want to give the government all the opportunities it needs to defuse the
situation there," she said earlier when speaking at a Washington forum organized by
the Asia Society.
"We want to help the government in any way possible to bring about peace in Rakhine
state."
'Great concern'
Two weeks ago, the United States expressed “great concern” over the humanitarian situation
in Rakhine state, following a visit by the American ambassador to the area.
"Broad swathes of both communities have been affected, and the humanitarian situation
remains of great concern,” the U.S. Embassy in Rangoon said in a statement after the visit
by a group led by newly appointed Ambassador Derek Mitchell and senior State Department
official Joseph Yun.
“Going forward, it will be important to address the urgent needs, while also laying the
groundwork for a long-term, sustainable and just solution” to the conflict," the
embassy said.
Burmese President Thein Sein had recently suggested that the Rohingyas should be deported,
raising an outcry from rights groups. Thousands of Buddhist monks took to the streets to
back his call and protest against the Rohingyas.
Reported by Nyein Shwe for RFA's Burmese service. Written in English by Parameswaran
Ponnudurai, Joshua Lipes and Rachel Vandenbrink.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/burma/rohingya-09182012133807.html
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