A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Burma census is not counting Rohingya Muslims, says UN agency
UN Population Fund says Burmese government has gone back on promises by excluding persecuted group from count
Census workers prepare documents in Rakhine state, Burma. Photograph: Khin Maung Win/AP

The UN agency helping Burma conduct
its first census in decades has said it is deeply concerned that
members of the long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim population are not being
counted, accusing the government of going back on its word.
In the violence-scarred state of Rakhine, census workers were asking
households to identify their ethnicity. When the answer was "Rohingya",
they reportedly said thank you, turned around and walked away.
Burma, a predominantly Buddhist nation of about 60 million, only
recently emerged from a half century of military rule. It held its last
count in 1983 and experts say the information being gathered from 30
March to 10 April is crucial for national development and planning.
But the inclusion of questions about ethnicity and race – approved by
the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) – have been widely criticised. Experts
warned they could inflame tensions at a delicate stage in the country's
transition to democracy.
That is especially true in Rakhine, home to the country's estimated 1.3
million Rohingya. In the past two years, their neighbourhoods have been
targeted by rampaging Buddhist mobs. Up to 280 people have been killed
and another 140,000 forced to flee their homes. Many are now living in
crowded camps on the outskirts of the state capital, Sittwe.
The UN agency said it had received assurances from the government that
everyone in the country would be allowed to self-identify their
ethnicity.
On the eve of the census, however, the presidential spokesman Ye Htut
announced that anyone who called themselves Rohingya would not be
counted. Though many members of the religious minority were born in
Burma to families who arrived generations ago, the government considers
them illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
Ye Htut said only those who called themselves Bengalis would be included
in the official tally. The UN agency said that went against earlier
promises.
"In its agreement with the United Nations …
the government made a commitment to conduct the exercise in accordance
with international census standards and human rights principles," it
said in a statement. "It explicitly agreed with the condition that each
person would be able to declare what ethnicity they belong to.
"Those not identifying with one of the listed ethnic categories would be
able to declare their ethnicity and have their response recorded by
enumerators."
The UN said it was deeply concerned by the government's about-face,
saying it could heighten tensions in Rakhine state and undermine the
credibility of data collected.
The census – funded largely by the world body and international donors –
was estimated to cost $74m. Rights groups and analysts have repeatedly
criticised the UNFPA for failing to properly consult a broad range of
ethnic groups before the count, which took years to plan, and ignoring
warnings about the potential dangers of including complex, politically
sensitive issues about ethnicity.
