Home > Sample essays > The Responsibility to Protect the Stateless Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar

Essay: The Responsibility to Protect the Stateless Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar

Essay details and download:

  • Subject area(s): Sample essays
  • Reading time: 4 minutes
  • Price: Free download
  • Published: 1 February 2018*
  • Last Modified: 23 July 2024
  • File format: Text
  • Words: 924 (approx)
  • Number of pages: 4 (approx)

Text preview of this essay:

This page of the essay has 924 words.



However fairylike this idea may seem, it is not always as effective as initially hoped. A good example of this is the current situation in Rakhine state in western Myanmar, where the Muslim minority of the Rohingya has undergone decades of human rights violations (Parnini, 2013). Along with claims of ethnic cleansing and statelessness, there have even been allegations of genocide (Kingston, 2015). The regime of military junta has resulted in an exodus into neighbouring countries. Even though many people know of the situation, the international community has not yet intervened. In this paper, the aim is to answer the following research question: ‘How does the international community bear the responsibility to protect (R2P) regarding the stateless Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar?’.

BODY

INDIVIDUAL: ROHINGYA

Human rights violations against the Rohingya arise from both structural and direct violence (Kingston, 2015). The structural violence involves discriminatory laws such as the 1982 Citizenship Act that officially denied the Rohingya Muslims of citizenship, declaring them stateless (Parnini, Othman & Ghazali, 2013). As a direct result of this statelessness, Rohingya are deprived of certain human rights such as the right to employment and education, that official citizens of Myanmar do have access to (Kingston, 2015). Direct violence against the stateless minority includes torture, murder, systemic rape and burning of homes and villages (Beyrer, 2017). Human rights activists have linked the violence to ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity (Kingston, 2015).When asked about whether the situation of the Rohingya Muslims of Myanmar could be considered a case of ethnic cleansing, the United Nations Secretary-General Guterres answered that “when one-third of the Rohingya population had to flee the country, can you find a better word to describe it?” (Al-Jazeera. UN urges Myanmar to end Rohingya violence. Al-Jazeera, Sept 14, 2017. http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/09/urges-rohingya- violence-170913174112622.html  

Due to all this violence, the Rohingya Muslims barely have a choice but to seek refuge abroad. However, foreign governments such as the one in Bangladesh often tend to see refugees as a threat to national security and as a result of this, temporary refugee camps have been set up to create a division between the incoming refugees and the Bangladeshi population (Parnini, 2013).

NATIONAL: MYANMAR

When looking at the issue from a national perspective, it is important to first address the actions on behalf of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) in response to decades of discrimination and structural violence. For example, in 2016, the ARSA attacked and killed Myanmar border officers and several soldiers in an effort to retaliate against the state. (SOURCE) In response, the Myanmar army reacted to this attack by increasing violence against the entire Rohingya Muslim population severely. International human rights law undoubtedly indicates that states should respond to armed groups (such as the ARSA) and to terror attacks. This response should however be in proportion to the actual threat (Beyrer, 2017). In this particular case, Myanmar’s military forces clearly did not act proportionally, by retaliating against the entire population (and not just the terror group), and these actions should have repercussions. According to the German philosopher Thomas Pogge, human rights violations are worst when committed by official agents from governments and he would agree that the government of Myanmar is clearly exhibiting official disrespect against the Rohingya Muslim minority (Pogge, 1995).

INTERNATIONAL: R2P + INTERNATIONAL COMM

After extensive discussion on the Responsibility to Protect, the ICISS made it clear that states have the primary responsibility to protect their citizens’ human rights. This responsibility includes protection against ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity and genocide (Dunne, 2013). However, they stressed that “where a state manifestly failed to do this, the international community would now share a collective responsibility to respond” (Dunne, 2013). In the case of the Myanmar government versus the Rohingya Muslims, there is plenty of proof that the state has failed to protect their citizens’ human rights, thus implying that the international community has the responsibility to intervene. Given the “Western optimism about government reforms and the fact that both China and Russia have blocked intervention in the past” (Kingston, 2015) however, it seems unlikely that the international community will intervene militarily any time soon. Nevertheless, the United Nations Security Council should speak to the humanitarian crisis and under international law, has the responsibility to determine whether an investigation should be launched into the possibility of genocide in Rakhine State (Beyrer, 2017). Moreover, the international community should oversee the situation and respond to the violation of human rights by utilizing the accessible resources to prevent any further violence (Kingston, 2015).

THEORY SECTION

A human rights theory that could possibly help enhance understanding of the issue of the Rohingya Muslims is the recognition theory of rights. This theory states that in order to establish a moral relationship between different actors, mutual recognition is key. According to Boucher “Recognition both makes and acknowledges rights, and therefore recognition is a necessary condition” (Boucher, 2011). The recognition theory of rights explains how states acquire obligations of a fundamentally moral nature in relation to their own populations. In the case of Myanmar violating rights of the Rohingya Muslims, it is clear that the state of Myanmar simply does not recognize the rights of the minority, explaining the lack of a moral relationship. The state of Myanmar has always seen the Muslim minority as foreigners, stating that they do not belong in Myanmar. In fact, Myanmar quite literally disregarded any acknowledgement of the rights of the Muslim minority by legally not recognizing them as citizens in the Citizenship Act of 1982 (Parnini et al., 2013). The recognition theory can help increase understanding of the disregard for human rights by the Myanmar government.

About this essay:

If you use part of this page in your own work, you need to provide a citation, as follows:

Essay Sauce, The Responsibility to Protect the Stateless Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. Available from:<https://www.essaysauce.com/sample-essays/2018-5-28-1527512285/> [Accessed 16-04-26].

These Sample essays have been submitted to us by students in order to help you with your studies.

* This essay may have been previously published on EssaySauce.com and/or Essay.uk.com at an earlier date than indicated.