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14 Feb, 2015

Why does Buddhist-majority Myanmar hate its Muslims so much? – Washington Post

The situation in Burma has changed for the better. The country has opened up. The secretive, dictatorial military junta that once held sway has allowed the advent of a fledgling, albeit heavily curtailed democracy. Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi was freed from decades of house arrest and is now a main leader of the opposition.

But the miserable condition of the Rohingya, a forgotten, stateless people, persists. The United Nations deems them “one of the most persecuted minorities in the world.” There are some 1.3 million Rohingya, the majority of whom live in Burma’s Rakhine state, on the western border with Bangladesh and India, and struggle to access basic state services. As WorldViews reported last year, around 140,000 Rohinigya eke out a squalid existence in ramshackle camps, displaced by ethnic and sectarian strife in 2013 and neglected by the Burmese government.

Read the rest: Why does this Buddhist-majority nation hate these Muslims so much? – The Washington Post.