မၾကာေသးခင္ကပဲ
မြတ္စ္လင္မ္ေခါင္းေဆာင္တစ္ခ်ဳိ႕နဲ႕ ကၽြန္မ ေတြ႕ဆံုလာခဲ့ပါတယ္။ သူတုိ႕ဟာ
ျမန္မာ ကလြဲၿပီး တျခားႏိုင္ငံကို မေရာက္ဖူးၾကပါဘူး။ ျမန္မာကလြဲၿပီး
တျခားဘယ္ေနရာကိုမွ အမိေျမအျဖစ္ မခံယူၾက ပါဘူး။ သူတို႕ကို
ကၽြန္မတို႕ရဲ႕ႏိုင္ငံသားမဟုတ္သလို အထင္ေရာက္ သြားေအာင္
ဖန္တီးေနတာက တကယ္ စိတ္မ ေကာင္း စရာပါ။ ဒီအေနအထားမ်ဳိးက တကယ္၀မ္းနည္း
စရာေကာင္းတဲ့ ျဖစ္စဥ္ပါ။ ကၽြန္မ တို႕အေနနဲ႕ ဒီအေရး အရာေတြကို
အျခားရႈေထာင့္အျမင္ကေန အံ၀င္ခြင္က်ျဖစ္လာေစဖို႕ ခ်ဥ္းကပ္ေလ့ လာရ ပါလိမ့္မယ္
”။
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/burma/muslim-04172013204636.html
Suu Kyi 'Very Sad' Over Muslim Plight in Burma
Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi expressed sadness Wednesday that
some of Burma's Muslim leaders whom she met recently felt as if they did
not belong to the country.
In rare comments on sectarian
violence at a news conference during her Japan visit, she said
Buddhist-majority Burma must learn to accommodate divergent views and
that the minority Muslim community must be made to feel secure.
"I've met some Muslim leaders very recently," she said of her talks
last week with representatives from the country’s leading Islamic groups
following deadly March violence between Muslims and Buddhists in
central Burma.
"It is very sad, because none of them has been
to any other country apart from Burma. They did not feel that they
belonged anywhere and it was sad for them that they were made to feel
that they didn't belong in our country either," Aung San Suu Kyi said.
"This is a very sad state of affairs. We must learn to accommodate those with different views from ours."
Speaking separately Wednesday to students at Tokyo University, Aung San
Suu Kyi said she was "not a magician" to make deep-rooted ethnic
disputes disappear instantly, in an apparent reference to criticism from
rights and other groups against her for being largely silent over the
communal clashes and minority rights.
At least 43 people were
reported dead and thousands, mostly Muslims, driven from their homes and
businesses in the latest violence in central Burma.
"They
wanted me to talk about how to make these communal differences disappear
... I'm not a magician. If I were, I'd say 'disappear' and they would
all disappear. Differences take a long time to sort out," she said,
according to Reuters news agency.
Citizenship
She also
said that the government of President Thein Sein should review Burma's
citizenship laws, although she again failed to directly answer a
question on whether she considered the Muslim Rohingyas, who had lived
for generations in the country, to be citizens.
Burma, she
said, is entitled to abide by its own laws, such as its citizenship law,
but it also has to assess those laws to ensure they comply with
international standards.
"This is what the Burmese government
should do, to face the issue of citizenship fairly," she was quoted
saying by the Associated Press.
"I have said that any violation
of human rights and any acts of violence are inimical to a united and
peaceful society and I stand by that," said Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate
who was locked up for 15 years by Burma's former military junta.
Last year, clashes between Muslim Rohingyas and Buddhist Rakhines
occurred twice in Burma's Rakhine state, leaving at least 180 dead and
tens of thousands homeless. Rights groups said Rohingyas bore the brunt
of the violence.
Around 800,000 Muslim Rohingyas live in
Rakhine state but most of them, according to rights groups, have been
denied citizenship as they are considered by most Burmese and the
government to be illegal immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh.
The stateless Rohingyas have been described by the U.N. as one of the world's most persecuted minorities.
Aung San Suu Kyi defended her conciliatory political style, saying her
focus was on building a more unified society rather than making
headlines, Agence France-Presse reported.
She said she has been addressing the plight of minority groups albeit in ways that people may consider "boring."
"In fact, I have been speaking all the time about ethnic nationalities.
But the point was that my statements were not colorful enough to please
everybody," she told the press conference.
The recent violence
in central Burma has been linked to radical monks and triggered
international concerns. Rights groups accused the security forces of
standing by while the attacks, which appeared to be well organized, took
place.
