Myanmar calls them ‘Bengali economic migrants’, illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. The Rohingya claim they settled a century ago in Rakhine during British rule. The term ‘Rohingya’ was first mentioned by Dr Francis Buchanan-Hamilton in a 1799 essay after a visit to Chittagong.
The Numbers
- 1.4 m in Myanmar
- 3,00,000 in Bangladesh
- 24,000 in Malaysia
Languages They Speak
- Urdu, Bengali dialect spoken in Chittagong tract, and Arakanese
The Problem
- Myanmar claims Rohingya do not figure anywhere in the “100 national races” in the country
- Citizenship Law of 1982 offered naturalised citizenship to Rohingya who could produce documents to prove they had been living in Myanmar for at least 60 years.
- Naturalised citizenship was revocable, carried fewer rights than full citizenship
- Those who failed to produce documents to prove domicile for 60 years were confined to ‘concentration camps’ and denied permission to leave the country
- Rohingya students expelled from Myanmar after 2012; Rohingya not allowed to study law or medicine
- Somali terror groups, Islamic fundamentalist groups and Islamic countries in Africa have called upon Muslims to rally for helping the Rohingya
The 2012 Flashpoint
- Gangrape of a Buddhist woman led to rioting in which 1,40,000 Rohingyas were rendered homeless and 1,00,000 people fled Myanmar. 8,00,000 were put in ‘concentration camps’.
Human Trafficking
- Rohingya are said to be paying as much as $200 to board illegal boats for Thailand. Young women unable to pay are allowed on the boat and eventually ‘sold’.
- A boatride from Thailand to Malaysia costs $2,000. Well-off Rohingya need documents to fly to Yangon from Rakhine, a 90-minute flight for which they pay as much as $,4000 compared to normal fare of $88.
Compiled by Uttam Sengupta