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Unrest in Burma Clouds View of Government Reforms
The United Nations says there are now 110,000 people who have been displaced by fighting in Rakhine state since violence first started in June.
Aid groups are still scrambling1 to treat the wounded and displaced but their workers say they continue to face intimidation2 and threats for aiding those in need.
United Nations authorities were granted access in late October to the affected3 areas to assess the situation. Ashok Nigam is the Resident Coordinator4 of the local U.N. mission.
"They were certainly very fearful and they were also very uncertain of what their future was, so we have tried to calm them down and immediate5 for these people is also the humanitarian6 assistance, but also the government wants to keep the two communities apart," said Nigam.
Thousands of Rohingya have now fled Burma by boat, with uncertain destinations. Some analysts7 say the government's inadequate8 response to the violence calls into question its commitment to reform, particularly in ethnic9 areas.
"The ethnic minority areas are certainly lagging behind in terms of the effects of the reform effort and the most recent violence in Rakhine state is leapfrogging that situation to the fore10 it no longer allows the government to ignore or to put off legal reform in the ethnic minority areas," said human rights lawyer Ben Zawacki.
In Rakhine’s burnt-out villages, tensions are still running high. Muslims across the country cancelled Eid celebrations last week. There are worries that the security forces deployed11 to protect the Rohingya are not sufficient, says Abu Taher, a Rohingya politician.
"In the whole country there is no security for the Muslim communities to celebrate Eid. That's why that celebration was suspended, because a lack of security," he said.
In the heart of one of Rangoon’s main Muslim neighborhoods, far from the violence in Rakhine state, there are few outwards12 signs of religious tensions.
But while daily prayers continue at the 150-year-old Bengali Sunni Jameh Mosque13, there are still worries among Muslims who are not ethnic Rohingyas. They say they are still worried about religious tensions, and concerned they could be targeted by Buddhist14 monks15 who worship at the pagoda16 next door.
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