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Myanmar rejects “unbalanced” Rohingya remarks in Oslo | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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In this picture taken on May 29, 2015, a Rohingya migrant child from Myanmar plays on a pile of clothes donated by Indonesian residents at a confinement camp for rescued Rohingya migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh in Kuala Langsa, Aceh province, Indonesia. (AFP Photo/Chaideer Mahyuddin)


In this picture taken on May 29, 2015, a Rohingya migrant child from Myanmar plays on a pile of clothes donated by Indonesian residents at a confinement camp for rescued Rohingya migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh in Kuala Langsa, Aceh province, Indonesia. (AFP Photo/Chaideer Mahyuddin)

In this picture taken on May 29, 2015, a Rohingya migrant child from Myanmar plays on a pile of clothes donated by Indonesian residents at a confinement camp for rescued Rohingya migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh in Kuala Langsa, Aceh province, Indonesia. (AFP Photo/Chaideer Mahyuddin)

Yangon, Myanmar, AP—Myanmar rejected as unbalanced comments made by several Nobel Peace Prize winners calling for an end to the persecution of Rohingya Muslims.

The Nobel laureates including South Africa’s Desmond Tutu, Iranian human rights activist Shirin Ebadi and former East Timor President José Ramos-Horta made the appeal following two conferences in the Norwegian capital last week. They called the situation of Rohingya in Myanmar “nothing less than genocide.”

Myanmar’s foreign ministry said in a statement published in Sunday’s newspapers that such comments turned a blind eye to Myanmar’s efforts on rebuilding trust between Buddhists and Muslims in western Rakhine state as well as “granting citizenship through national verification process to those Bengalis living in Myanmar for many years.”

Myanmar does not recognize the Rohingya as an ethnic community and refers to the more than 1 million members in Rakhine state as Bengalis—immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh. They have been denied citizenship and basic rights. More than 100,000 are confined to internal camps.

In recent weeks, the plight of Rohingya has turned into a regional crisis when thousands landed on the shores of Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, with others still believed stranded at sea.

The foreign ministry said Myanmar categorically rejects the “unbalanced and negative comments.”

Others who criticized Myanmar’s policies in Oslo included philanthropist George Soros, who escaped Nazi-occupied Hungary and said that there were “alarming” parallels between the plight of the Rohingya and the Nazi genocide.