Thank you to the committee for inviting me here to talk about the devastating humanitarian situation of the Rohingya in Burma.
I want to begin my remarks today by giving a factual background and then get to some of the recommendations we have about how to address the situation.
The current human rights situation of the 1.2 million Rohingya Muslims in Burma remains extremely dire. The new government of Aung San Suu Kyi faces the same challenges as the previous military-backed government. Unfortunately, public statements by senior government officials do not inspire the confidence that they are taking seriously the serious humanitarian crisis in western Burma. Suu Kyi herself has denied the violence that took place in 2012 that led to the current situation, which I'll get to in a moment. She denies that it was ethnic cleansing and that crimes against humanity have occurred. She believes and has stated publicly that some of the violence that occurred in 2012 is exaggerated, and some of her inner circle have publicly denied that Rohingya exist and they dismiss all of the Rohingya who are in Burma as “Bengali immigrants” or “Bengalese”.
Regardless of what you think about Aung San Suu Kyi and her leadership of the democracy movement and her general status as a human rights icon, which we would not dispute, her record on the Rohingya Muslims of Burma has been disappointing. The recent lifting of the state of emergency in Rakhine State, where most of the Rohingya are, doesn't or hasn't really improved the situation of the Rohingya. Many of them, most of them, remain restricted in IDP camps, and the lives of an estimated 1.1 million other Rohingya, who live in small townships in the northeast and are subject to local curfew orders, remain extremely bad as well.
Local orders remain in place—these are local municipal orders that are set up by government at the local level—that impose travel restrictions. It was a restriction such as this that led directly to the deaths of 21 Muslims—they weren't all Rohingya, but there are also common Muslims and other Burmese Muslims who don't self-identify as Rohingya—recently, this last month, on April 19. Restrictions essentially inspire an atmosphere in the country where local police feel as though they can do anything, that they can stop Rohingya on the basis of their being Muslim, keep them out of camps, keep them inside of camps, and keep them out of hospitals. The understandable animosity this leads to causes violence to occur. Police take matters into their own hands.
In 2015, an estimated 25,000 Rohingya Muslims were resettled or relocated by the government. They rebuilt their houses on the same site as some of the homes that were destroyed in the violence in 2012. This was a positive development, but I want to make clear that this should not distract from the very serious denial of rights that still exists on the ground today.
Now I'm focusing on the situation today, but let me step back and talk for a second about 2012. I would admit into the record—or just read on your own time—the reports we wrote in 2012. Human Rights Watch wrote two reports about the violence that occurred in 2012, and we documented what amounted to crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing. The violence was pervasive. There was state complicity at the local level. There was also complicity, by omissions on the part of local government, to stop private citizens from carrying out violence. Thousands of houses were destroyed and hundreds of people were killed. More importantly, tens of thousands of people fled their homes and ended up in the dire straits that I'm talking about today.
Today we have about 120,000 displaced Rohingya living in IDP camps, around 95,000 near Sittwe in the north. They face travel restrictions that essentially mean they're in ghettos. These camps are not humanitarian sites, but rather ghettoized semi-urban areas in which people live, but cannot leave. They cannot go to find work, and they depend on the charity or assistance of relatives who send money to the camps from abroad, or on humanitarian groups who supply the camps.
What we're urging the NLD government to do is basically to remove the restrictions on freedom of travel that make those camps into ghettos, so that the Rohingya could access basic services, go back to their homes and determine whether they wanted to rebuild them, or go to hospitals to seek medical treatment. These are the sorts of things they can't do because of their confinement in these ghetto-type camps. Removing these local restrictions should be a priority for the government, and we're urging donor governments to the Government of Burma to push that particular point on the Government of Burma. Get those local restrictions removed.
In the long term, the bigger issue is the legal situation. Many or most Rohingya lack legal status as citizens of Burma. The government is essentially denying that they're citizens. The government really needs to take a long look at the laws that make that possible. The primary law that makes that possible is the 1982 Citizenship Act. We're urging donors, including Canada, to push the NLD government to amend, or better yet, repeal the 1982 Citizenship Law.
The other issue is people fleeing Burma in boats, taking to the Andaman Sea and attempting to get to Malaysia. This has been a big problem in previous years for two reasons. One, it subjects them to potential trafficking by abusive traffickers who can put them in dicey economic situations, like debt bondage in the fishing industry. So exposure to trafficking, because of the illegality of this movement, is one problem. The second problem is a maritime one. These boats are often rickety and not built to go on the open ocean to Malaysia. Some of them end up sinking or their engines stall out and people end up drifting for days at sea. That's why you've seen so many deaths associated with that boat exodus: deaths due to exposure, because these boats are sometimes on the water for months at a time, or deaths from drowning. There has been a downturn in the number of these boats travelling down to Malaysia via the Thai coast. The numbers fell to a trickle in the last year.
This should not be the cause of complacency. This is not something that should be celebrated, because the main factor for the downturn has been the harsh push-back by Malaysia and Thailand and the interdiction of the smuggling networks. It does not reflect a downturn in a desire by the Rohingya to leave. There remain many people who want to leave but know that it's impossible. They had a small but dangerous chance last year by boat, but now it's almost impossible. The same situation existed in 2015, but the avenues for escape have narrowed. That's the overview.
I want to end by alerting you to one last issue that should always be taken into account when you're talking about the Rohingya, which is the treatment of the Rohingya by two other governments, the Government of Thailand and the Government of Malaysia. There are many Rohingya who have attempted to flee to Malaysia and who have ended up in the hands of traffickers in Thailand. The Government of Thailand, which is led by a military junta, has taken steps to crack down on trafficking networks, but the same underlying corruption by local security forces exists and the possibility that trafficking cartels will regroup and grow again is very real.
As for the Government of Malaysia, they often escape scrutiny because they have allowed so many Rohingya to come into their country. That is true, and for that they should be applauded. That does not means the situation of the Rohingya in Malaysia is a very good one. Many of them, despite the overarching government's acceptance of their presence in Malaysia, are preyed on by local security forces, police, and local party paramilitary police, who solicit bribes from them on the basis of their essentially illegal status. They're not given refugee status, they're not given refugee cards, and many of them are essentially illegally present in Malaysia. This allows local police to prey on them for extortion. If they don't pay bribes, they are placed in immigration detention, and in many cases are deported back to Burma, which is a violation, arguably, of refugee law. Unfortunately, Malaysia is not a signatory to the 1950s refugee convention.
I want to remind all the committee members of Malaysia's role in all of this. They should not be forgotten in the role they play. Our regional suggestion, not just to governments like Canada and other donor governments, but to governments of the ASEAN region, is that Malaysia, with its partners and allies, including the Government of Canada, should be the leader in undertaking a regional summit of involved states, including Burma, to address the Rohingya situation in western Burma. Also, it should be the leader in the practical and logistical issues of dealing with the Rohingya refugees who have fled.
That is what I want to talk about at the outset. I know there are going to be a lot of specific questions about individual issues, but that's the general overview. I'd recommend also that if anybody has any other questions about the general overview of Burma itself, we have a Burma page on our website with a great deal of information on it.