Dear BBC: I listened to your interview with U Tun Khin, the Chairman
of the Rohingya Association of Britain on the morning Burmese program
of September 1st, 2010. There are two dimensions in this case. We
don't deny these Muslims have faced severe suppressions in the
northern Arakan by the Burmese military. However, they are not only
ethnic group under brutal oppression of the junta. We are wondering
why the world's famous medias are more concerned with Rohingya than
other ethnic minorities.
To recognize "Rohingya" as a
national indigenous people is a different issue. These people were
descendents of the Bengali agricultural laborers in the British
colonial period. I have historically proved that. You can read my
article in "SOAS Bulletin of Burma Research 3-2." I am ready to debate
with any scholar on this topic. They came to live in Arakan State in
the colonial period. The Arakanese people welcomed. After the Second
World War, they were the majority in that area and before the
declaration of independence they demanded the area to be incorporated
into East Pakistan that is now Bangladesh. When the Pakistani leaders
discouraged their demand they declared Jihad on the Union of Burma.
When they lost the jungle war, they created the term "Rohingya,"
calling for the "Rohingya State" for them. There has never been such
an ethnic group in Burmese history.
I
agree what the Congressman Smith said that after living for
generations these Pakistani, Arabs and Indians became British Citizens.
But these immigrants in Britain are not demanding a national
territory. They are not demanding a separate ethnic identity, like
Scottish, Irish or Whales. They are not calling for a national area of
themselves even in the North Sea. They call themselves British. In
1947 these Chittagonian Bengalis demanded the partition of Arakan into
two states. How would the native Arakanese feel if their ancestral
land is divided to give away a part to the immigrants? I want to
ask BBC and U Tun Khin.
Sincerely,
Aye Chan
Professor of History
Department of International Cultures
Kanda University of International Studies
1-4-1 Wakaba, Mihamaku, Chiba 261-0014
Japan
Tel. (Office)
http://arakanindobhasaa.blogspot.com/2011/11/sky-high-liar-bbcs-kye-tha-ma-on-sunday.html
............
Sources: Rakhapura
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