Americans push Trump govt to take action against violence in Myanmar

A Rohingya refugee girl peeks through a hole made in a plastic wall dividing the shelters at Balu Kali Refugee Camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, February 28, 2017. REUTERS/Stringer
A political analyst believes that American citizens should press the Washington government to take action against violence against Muslims in Rohingya in the Rakhine province of Myanmar.

The head of a non-governmental US-based Myanmar-based US-based institution, Robert Murrow, said in a speech at Mason University that the Americans should push the White House to the top of the list, according to the International Tonnes News Agency , quoting the Anatolian news agency . Against Continuing Violence Against Muslims in Rohingya in Myanmar.

He went on to state: everyone should be informed about injustice in the Rakhine province to stop the genocide.

Since late August, three months ago, more than 620,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to Bangladesh, fearing violent acts by the security forces and the Myanmar Army. The UN has published this statistics.

So far, a large number of Rohingya Muslims have been killed in this repressive operation. Myanmar’s army and mobs have raped a large number of Rohingya women and girls.

Bangladesh Foreign Minister Abul Hassan Mahmoud Ali said in September that more than 3,000 Rohingya Muslims were killed during violent crackdowns on Myanmar’s security and army forces.

“As a result of the news media, people continue to realize that the killings and crimes committed against the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar have come to light,” Muro continued. A few years ago, most Americans did not even know where Myanmar was.

“But along with the news media, we need to go further than demonstrations and gatherings against the Myanmar embassy in Washington,” the activist said. The US Congress must negotiate this issue and urge the government to take action against the violence that has been committed in Myanmar.

Safwan Allah Verdi, an Anatolian reporter who recently visited the camps of Rohingya’s camp in Bangladesh, said: I really got scared from what I saw in the region during the past month. I really can not understand how a human being can commit such evil acts. This is definitely a genocide and I fear that the authorities will achieve a comprehensive agreement, the whole of Rohingya Muslims in the Rakhine governorate will have the same fate that happened in Rwanda or Bosnia in the past.